Speex

joined 1 year ago
MODERATOR OF
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Race Winner Spoiler Test. (sh.itjust.works)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by Speex@sh.itjust.works to c/formula1@lemmy.ml
 

Race Winner is

spoiler___Lemmy wins

[–] Speex@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 year ago

Ahh, I was an Apollo user on IOS. Thanks for the heads up

[–] Speex@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 year ago (3 children)

That’s a great question. Is On Sync sports mode a Bot? I never watched the races live. I tried a quick search but the reddits talking about it are still dark (woohoo).

Bots on Lemmy are still fairly sparse. We are working on configuring one now for general moderation.

[–] Speex@sh.itjust.works 7 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (5 children)

The plan is to make a weekend a race discussion, I am working on getting a bot running to automate the process but as we get things going it will be manual.

As for race spoilers in titles we have not made a decision, May need to get a community vote going. I living in west coast US also dislike the spoilers but try to remember folks are pretty excited about their team winning. Not sure how I would vote at this time. Please think about it yourselves.

[–] Speex@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 year ago

I thought it started right after he signed the last one really

 

Not surprising really

[–] Speex@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 year ago

Nope. Not a financially viable thing to do atm.

Good luck at your first event. Hope it’s smooth and filled with appropriate amounts of available hydration opportunities.

[–] Speex@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 year ago

NP.

I haven’t looked really. There is a DevOps community I think. Haven’t seen any SRE (site reliability engineer) or monitoring communities, One will probably pop up sooner than later.

 

Anyone found a community for community moderators to share knowledge or ask related questions?

[–] Speex@sh.itjust.works 4 points 1 year ago (2 children)

This is pretty accurate to what I do professionally.

The point made here about the Average user experience is super super important. It’s good to know what that is for several reasons. Mainly performance tuning. But when it comes to trying to prevent disasters the middle isn’t useful.

Another thing to add. This came to me recently. There are two kinds of graphs and dashboards, those for technical folks and those for managers and non-technical folks. You want to develop both or one with variables to then simplify the graphs/dashboard. Annotations and good titles IMHO are good. Some folks prefer to have technical graph titles. I get the draw but I have to deal with multiple leads, C levels, project managers, and managers that don’t care about the technical stat just where it is compared to where it should be

 

He’s not a Rookie and he’s not in a tractor…. As a McLaren fan it feels bad.

[–] Speex@sh.itjust.works 13 points 1 year ago (4 children)

I can give a brief(ish) overview sure.

Monitor everything :P

But really monitor meaningfully. CPU usage matters but a high CPU usage doesn’t indicate an issue. High load doesn’t mean an issue.
High CPU for a long period of time or outside normal time frames does mean something. High load outside normal usage times could indicate an issue. Or when the service isn’t running. Understand your key metrics and what they mean to failures, end user experience, and business expectation.

Start all projects with monitoring in mind, the earlier to you begin monitoring the easier it is to implement. Re configuring code and infrastructure after the fact is a lot of technical debt. If you are willing and can guarantee that debt will be handled at a later time then good luck. But we know how projects go.

Assign flags to calls. If your application runs results in a response that’s started from and ends up at an end user, Send an identifying flag. Let that flag travel the entire call and you are able to break down traces and find failures.. Failures don’t have to be in error outs, time outs. A call that takes 10x longer than the rest of the calls can cascade and shows the inefficiency and realiability.

Spend time on log and error handling. These are your gatekeepers to troubleshooting. The more time spent upfront making them valuable, the less time you have to look at them when shit hits the fan.

Alerts and Monitors MUST mean something. Alert fatigue is real, you experience it everyday I’m sure. That email that comes in that has some kind of daily/weekly status information that gets right clicked and marked as read. That’s alert fatigue. Alerts should be made in a way that scales.

  • Take a Look as a time allows - logs with potential issues
  • Investigate as something could be wrong - warnings
  • Shits down fix it - Alert

APM matters Collect that data, you want to see everything from processor to response times, latency, and performance. These metrics will help you identify not only alerting opportunities but also efficiency opportunities. We know users can be fickle. How long are people willing to sit and wait for a webpage to load…. Unlike the 1990’s 10-30 seconds is not groovy. Use the metrics and try to compare and marry them with business key performance indicators(KPI). What is the business side looking for to show things are successful. How can you use application metrics and server metrics to match their KPIs.

Custom scripts are great. They are part of the cycle that companies go through.
Custom scripts to monitor —> Too much not enough staff —> SAAS Solutions (Datadog, Solar Winds, Prometheus, Grafana, New Relic) —>. Company huge SAAS costs high and doesn’t accurately monitor our own custom applications —> and we’re back to custom scripts. Netflix, Google, Twitter all have custom monitoring tools.

Many of the SAAS solutions are low cost and have options and even free tiers. The open source solutions also have excellent and industry level tools. All solutions require the team to actively work on them in a collaborative way. Buy in is required for successful monitoring, alerting, and incident response.

Log everything, parse it all, win.

[–] Speex@sh.itjust.works 16 points 1 year ago (7 children)

You got some monitoring in place? Can offer some assistance with monitoring ideas if you need, is part of what I do.

Also take care of yourself. We can go outside if we can’t log in. Or go back to work..

 

Good to see these folks helping out

[–] Speex@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 year ago

Agreed. It’s been a rough year being a McLaren fan. I think Lando has the ability to win races if he was driving something more similar to an F1 car instead of a tractor. Let’s hope some upgrades keep coming and we see more racing from them.

 

Tough being a Mclaren fan this year. At least we get some history.

 

For those F1 race fans out there.

 

Was just looking at going to the Vegas GP, its only a 16hour drive for me.

2200$ standing tickets for Saturday wow just wow. That’s not travel, lodging, or food costs.

I checked for Sakura GP, we could fly to Tokyo, Hotel, and GP tickets. Plus stay for a week with $2k travel costs. Not including food and other fun expenses.

I’ll take my foreign vacation with a dash of F1 please. Also maybe they have a Yukon grandstand. Go Yuki!

 

Interesting take.

 

I’d like to see these across the board.

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