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zachmu

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Chicago charges Medicaid 8x the national median for an ambulance ride

dolthub.com
3 points·by zachmu·4 mesi fa·2 comments

comments

zachmu
·3 mesi fa·discuss
I remember that engineering decision. You guys were pretty early customers for your throughput and durability requirements (we hadn't even added standby replication yet when you started your integration). We've come a long way in the years since then.
zachmu
·3 mesi fa·discuss
Neon is basically this same idea: postgres on a copy-on-write file system.

These aren't really "branches" though, they're hard forks. You can't merge them back after making changes. Dolt is still the only SQL database with branch and merge.
zachmu
·3 mesi fa·discuss
Can you be more specific about what complications you ran into? As for performance, Dolt is faster overall than MySQL on sysbench now.

https://docs.dolthub.com/sql-reference/benchmarks/latency
zachmu
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Figures are per ambulance ride.
zachmu
·4 mesi fa·discuss
https://docs.dolthub.com/other/faq#why-is-it-called-dolt-are...
zachmu
·4 mesi fa·discuss
What's the incentive for people to contribute to an open source project?
zachmu
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Regardless of whether this particular project goes anywhere, it's at least very interesting that Yegge has discovered a way to make multi-agent setups work better. Giving them discrete personas ("you are a senior database engineer with 30 years of experience") and narrower scopes makes them much more effective. This was surprising to me but makes a lot of sense in retrospect.
zachmu
·4 mesi fa·discuss
It is DOLT, you were right.
zachmu
·4 mesi fa·discuss
lol it's DOLT, not DoIt.

Yegge's Medium uses a serif font so you can tell, but in many faces you can't.

(We still get this comment constantly and it's very unfortunate)
zachmu
·6 mesi fa·discuss
We build DoltDB, which is a version-controlled SQL database. Recently we've been working with customers doing exactly this, giving an AI agent access to their database. You give the agent its own branch / clone of the prod DB to work on, then merge their changes back to main after review if everything looks good. This requires running Dolt / Doltgres as your database server instead of MySQL / Postgres, of course. But it's free and open source, give it a shot.

https://github.com/dolthub/dolt
zachmu
·2 anni fa·discuss
The CCP owns 1% of Bytedance and gets to appoint a board seat

https://www.wsj.com/articles/xi-jinpings-subtle-strategy-to-...
zachmu
·2 anni fa·discuss
You are drastically overestimating the capabilities and determination of tiktok users
zachmu
·2 anni fa·discuss
Indeed, we are so awash in propaganda it's often difficult to recognize it as such.

"What's water?"
zachmu
·2 anni fa·discuss
It's not even content per se, it's much more insidious than that.

The comment I originally replied to likened tiktok to a printing press, but that's not quite right.

Imagine a printing press owned by an enemy that would subtly manipulate the text of whatever you tried to print. Or maybe it would omit entire articles from certain recipients of the newspaper, or reorganize the page layout to emphasize different things than the editor intended.

We wouldn't allow this hypothetical printing press controlled by a hostile foreign government to be sold in the US, we would be crazy to.
zachmu
·2 anni fa·discuss
A US citizen distributing foreign media themselves is quite different than what is effectively a directly controlled broadcast owned by a foreign government.
zachmu
·2 anni fa·discuss
The US government working with social media companies to censor Americans (and other people) on those platforms is also pretty bad, yes. My impression is that their influence is much weaker and more marginal than is the case with the CCP and tiktok, though. But I would be sympathetic to other countries banning US social media on the ground of US govt influence.
zachmu
·2 anni fa·discuss
Whatever you think of our home-grown propaganda outlets, the US govt taking different approaches to foreign outlets should be uncontroversial. Unlike the CCP, US citizens have first amendment rights.
zachmu
·2 anni fa·discuss
Tiktok isn't "some website", it is partially owned and controlled by the CCP, which influences what content gets shown to Americans. A majority of zoomers get most of their news and information primarily from this platform, which again is under the influence of a hostile foreign government. (TikTok also spies on US citizens for the CCP, but let's keep this restricted to the free speech argument about the ban).

We actually don't have to shrug and say "oh well, first amendment" with respect to propaganda outlets of foreign countries.