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Database is a pretty broad term these days. Doesn't this depend on the database we're talking about?

Something like Big Table is pretty good at storing small blobs. It's also pretty good at scaling, so you should never really have to delete "usage statistics, metrics, GPS locations, session data" or anything really.

Regarding logs, I completely agree. Something like tornado + scribe + s3 works quite well. (check out https://github.com/gregbayer/logcatcher) But then EMR + Scribe can be used to access it like a db.


Nice work!


Thanks! git-subtree looks very useful. Have you used it extensively? Any gotchas?


I haven't used it enough to really give you any gotchas. It has let me open source some stuff to github really easily though.


Agreed that rss is no longer the only source for what I read. But the concept of feeds lives on. Friends' blogs, techmeme, hn, twitter, facebook, and personalization services can all be consumed as feeds. What has passed is the ability to consume all information available. We are all faced with increasing information overload and must seek out tools and techniques to help filter down and consume information more effectively.

As an example, some news readers offer curated top stories, as well as twitter, hackernews, reddit and facebook feeds in a single interface which is designed for easy visual scanning and efficient consumption. By customizing a news aggregator that offers more than just traditional rss feeds, it is relatively easy to stay on top of a manageable stream of information. Disclosure: I'm a developer at Pulse. http://pulsene.ws


Minority should not be absolute. "Underrepresented minority" only makes sense in context.


The term "underrepresented minority" is misleading.

In any state where nonhispanic whites are a minority (e.g., CA), they are typically an underrepresented minority (only Asians tend to be truly overrepresented). I've never heard whites described as "minority" as a result of this.


Non-hispanic Whites are not a minority in California [1]. And even if they were, I'd be very interested in seeing any statistics that show them as underrepresented in any context of significance (i.e. not prison).

[1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_California#Raci...


Nonhispanic whites are 44% of CA. That's a minority.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minority-majority_state

Nonhispanic whites make up only 32% of UC Berkeley. That's underrepresented.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/03/04/racial-breakdown-of...


OK, you are correct.

Though I still think the statement, "any state where nonhispanic whites are a minority (e.g., CA), they are typically an underrepresented minority" is very much hyperbole, which was the point I was trying to make.


That's because (for the time being), they have a plurality, even if they don't have a majority.


Well, the point is that "minority" in this context (well, in any racially-related context in the US) is a PC euphemism for black/Hispanic.


Great experience: money for expenses, office space, and excellent mentorship. Like most incubators, a big part of the value add also comes from the other teams you'll work along side.



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