Arvid Lundmark
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I write, like, less than in a comment and, like, I maybe write the greater than sign or something like that. And the model is like, yeah, you look sketchy. Like, are you sure you want to do that? But eventually it should be able to catch harder bugs, too.
I write, like, less than in a comment and, like, I maybe write the greater than sign or something like that. And the model is like, yeah, you look sketchy. Like, are you sure you want to do that? But eventually it should be able to catch harder bugs, too.
I write, like, less than in a comment and, like, I maybe write the greater than sign or something like that. And the model is like, yeah, you look sketchy. Like, are you sure you want to do that? But eventually it should be able to catch harder bugs, too.
I mean, there's certainly cool solutions there. There's this new API that is being developed for... It's not in AWS, but, you know, it certainly is. I think it's in PlanetScale. I don't know if PlanetScale was the first one to add it. It's this ability to sort of add branches to a database, which is...
I mean, there's certainly cool solutions there. There's this new API that is being developed for... It's not in AWS, but, you know, it certainly is. I think it's in PlanetScale. I don't know if PlanetScale was the first one to add it. It's this ability to sort of add branches to a database, which is...
I mean, there's certainly cool solutions there. There's this new API that is being developed for... It's not in AWS, but, you know, it certainly is. I think it's in PlanetScale. I don't know if PlanetScale was the first one to add it. It's this ability to sort of add branches to a database, which is...
Like if you're working on a feature and you want to test against a broad database, but you don't actually want to test against a broad database, you could sort of add a branch to the database. And the way to do that is to add a branch to the write-ahead log. And there's obviously a lot of technical complexity in doing it correctly. I guess database companies need new things to do.
Like if you're working on a feature and you want to test against a broad database, but you don't actually want to test against a broad database, you could sort of add a branch to the database. And the way to do that is to add a branch to the write-ahead log. And there's obviously a lot of technical complexity in doing it correctly. I guess database companies need new things to do.
Like if you're working on a feature and you want to test against a broad database, but you don't actually want to test against a broad database, you could sort of add a branch to the database. And the way to do that is to add a branch to the write-ahead log. And there's obviously a lot of technical complexity in doing it correctly. I guess database companies need new things to do.
They have good databases now. And I think TurboBuffer, which is one of the databases we use, is going to add maybe branching to the Red Hat log. And so maybe the AI agents will use branching. They'll test against some branch, and it's sort of going to be a requirement for the database to support branching or something.
They have good databases now. And I think TurboBuffer, which is one of the databases we use, is going to add maybe branching to the Red Hat log. And so maybe the AI agents will use branching. They'll test against some branch, and it's sort of going to be a requirement for the database to support branching or something.
They have good databases now. And I think TurboBuffer, which is one of the databases we use, is going to add maybe branching to the Red Hat log. And so maybe the AI agents will use branching. They'll test against some branch, and it's sort of going to be a requirement for the database to support branching or something.
Right. Yeah. I feel like everything needs branching. Yeah.
Right. Yeah. I feel like everything needs branching. Yeah.
Right. Yeah. I feel like everything needs branching. Yeah.
I mean, there's obviously these super clever algorithms to make sure that you don't actually use a lot of space or CPU or whatever.
I mean, there's obviously these super clever algorithms to make sure that you don't actually use a lot of space or CPU or whatever.
I mean, there's obviously these super clever algorithms to make sure that you don't actually use a lot of space or CPU or whatever.
I have a few friends who are super senior engineers, and one of their lines is like, it's very hard to predict where systems will break when you scale them. You can sort of try to predict in advance, but there's always something weird that's going to happen when you add this extra zero. You thought you thought through everything, but you didn't actually think through everything.
I have a few friends who are super senior engineers, and one of their lines is like, it's very hard to predict where systems will break when you scale them. You can sort of try to predict in advance, but there's always something weird that's going to happen when you add this extra zero. You thought you thought through everything, but you didn't actually think through everything.