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> Mia the hairstylist got to work, and casually asked what I do for a living. "I'm an Intel fellow, I work on datacenter performance." Silence.

How could she not know?


This part of the article was cringe for me. Like he wanted to impress Mia and once she didn’t react he realized he needed to change jobs.

BG and eBPF are awesome but this article read like a midlife crisis to me.


For people who’s main computing devices are phones, this isn’t hard to believe at all.

Interacting outside of the tech bubble is eye opening. Conversely, the hair stylist might have mentioned the brand of a super popular scissor supplier/other equipment you’d have never heard of.


You missed the sarcasm.

Lol, I did. Needed a /s!

Finally some practical daily affirmations for computer


Spot the odd one out


I believe Bryan is a well known em dash addict


>I believe Bryan is a well known em dash addict

I was hoping he'd make the leaderboard, but perhaps the addiction took proper hold in more recent years:

https://www.gally.net/miscellaneous/hn-em-dash-user-leaderbo...

https://news.ycombinator.com/user?id=bcantrill

No doubt his em dashes are legit, of course.


And I mean no disrespect to him for it, it’s just kind of funny


This is an insanely cool blog


Anecdotally one thing I’ve noticed is that older films had much fewer characters.

Take a movie like When Harry Met Sally — there are basically four on screen characters, giving more time to build chemistry and relationships


Movies with stories about building chemistry and relationships just need fewer characters. They still exist:

- All of Us Strangers (2023)

- Aftersun (2022)

- The Lighthouse (2019)

- Portrait of a Lady on Fire (Portrait de la jeune fille en feu) (2019)

- The Duke of Burgundy (2014)


They are also shorter which means they don’t overstay their welcome


I'm getting back in to audio programming, starting off with Pd[1] and reading Miller Puckette's book[2]. I'm planning on writing some low-level C libraries afterwards, using The Audio Programming Book[3] as a guide

[1] https://puredata.info

[2] https://msp.ucsd.edu/techniques.htm

[3] https://mitpress.mit.edu/9780262014465/the-audio-programming...


What's your view on how these people actually impacted the adoption of SDN in general?

> The investments NSF made in SDN over the past two decades have paid huge dividends.

In my view this seems a little overblown. The general idea of separation of control and data plane is just that - an idea. In practice, none of the early firms (like Nicira) have had any significant impact on what's happening in industry. Happy to be corrected if that's not accurate!


Depends where you are in the industry - the hyperscalers specifically have budget to afford a team to write P4 or other SDN code to manage their networks in production, so they're probably the biggest beneficiaries.

Lower end, it did make programmability more accessible to more folks and enabled whitebox switches to compete against entrenched players to a far greater extent than previously possible. Again, hyperscalers are going to be the main folks who buy this kind of gear and run SONiC or similar on it, so they can own the full switch software stack.

Many of the startup companies in the SDN space did have successful exits into larger players - for example Nicira into VMWare, Barefoot (Tofino switch chip) and Ananki (the ONF 4G/5G spinoff) into Intel. Also, much of the software was developed as open source, and is still out there to be used and built on.


What are some of the SDN open source software that is still useful today ? e.g. ODL, ONOS, Ryu, Floodlight


ONOS is being used with VOLTHA to enable PON networking in various locations (For example DT in Germany: https://convergedigest.com/deutsche-telekom-taps-open-source... , and IIRC it's also in production in Turkey).

There was a Comcast deployment to trial ONOS + whitebox switches a while ago.

The specific interplay of commercial deployment to open source vs commercial closed source in the networking space was better described in this post from Larry Peterson: https://systemsapproach.org/2022/02/28/venn-diagram-engineer...


The logical fallacy here is that the most expensive thing is the best, which can be the case sometimes but not all that often in my experience.


The media love an apocalyptic tech story -- hence why Superintelligent AI stories seem to have endless appeal


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