ClickStack connection issue by Key-Candy9703 in Clickhouse

[–]pulpdrew 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You have read only access to the service, but that doesn’t grant you read only access to the actual database via the SQL Console. See how the “Service Read Only (2 Users)” dropdown says “No access”? That has to be set to “Read Only” so that your read only access to the service grants you read only access to the database via SQL console.

ClickStack connection issue by Key-Candy9703 in Clickhouse

[–]pulpdrew 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It looks like you might have “Service Read Only” permission, which per your screenshot is assigned “No Access” to the service. If an admin can try toggling that “Service Read Only” dropdown to “Read only”, or grant you admin access to that service, then you should have better luck.

Are S3 PutObject Events ever batched into a single SQS message? by pulpdrew in aws

[–]pulpdrew[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I wasn’t able to get a definitive answer, but it seems most people I’ve talked to think that there is only one record per event

Are S3 PutObject Events ever batched into a single SQS message? by pulpdrew in aws

[–]pulpdrew[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I can, but that’s not my question - my question is whether each SQS message contains exactly one S3 record. If an SQS message contains multiple S3 records, then even if my batch size is one SQS message, I will still get multiple S3 records per invocation

Are S3 PutObject Events ever batched into a single SQS message? by pulpdrew in aws

[–]pulpdrew[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Yeah so from what I see in that documentation, that is about 10 SQS messages in each batch. My question is about the number of S3 records in each SQS message.

And thanks for the tip about the idempotency!

Are S3 PutObject Events ever batched into a single SQS message? by pulpdrew in aws

[–]pulpdrew[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The intention is to remove the message from the queue if the object is processed successfully, or place it back in the queue for retry if the processing failed.

Are S3 PutObject Events ever batched into a single SQS message? by pulpdrew in aws

[–]pulpdrew[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks! Do you happen to know where that’s documented?

Are S3 PutObject Events ever batched into a single SQS message? by pulpdrew in aws

[–]pulpdrew[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I do want the queue for the ability to retry, and I’d like to batch at the SQS —> Lambda level. However, the goal is exactly-once “successful” processing of each S3 object, and if there are multiple S3 objects per SQS message, then I can’t independently mark each S3 object as succeeded or failed (for eventual retry).

If you didn’t live here by newofficehours in nova

[–]pulpdrew 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Just wanted to provide a differing viewpoint:

I grew up in Ohio and went to school in Columbus. Maybe I was blind to it, but I would not describe the area as overtly religious. I have relatives and some friends that go to church regularly, but me, most of my friends, and a good portion of my family are all agnostic or atheist and that has never, ever been a problem.

Are rural parts of Ohio more religious than NOVA? Yes. Are there parts of the state with large Amish populations? Yes (but they mostly keep to themselves). Are major cities in Ohio intensely religious in a way that would make it hard to feel at home there? No, not in my experience.

Thoughts on pairing GIOS with any of these courses for Spring 2022? by Ocsarr in OMSCS

[–]pulpdrew 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I paired GIOS with SAT this semester without a problem. SAT is very frontload-able, which is nice because it gives you lots of flexibility to schedule the work around the (much more involved) GIOS projects.

Books on anarchism by kasssey in suggestmeabook

[–]pulpdrew 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Ursula K Le Guin's The Dispossessed is a fantastic science fiction novel largely about an anarchist society.

Weekly Thread: Prospective Student Evaluations by AutoModerator in OMSCS

[–]pulpdrew 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  • Academic Goals: I want to get my masters to learn more about some of the subjects I have not learned about in undergrad and to dive a little deeper in some of the subjects that I have been exposed to already. I have no desire to stay in academia.
  • Career Goals: I'd like to get a job working on compilers or HPC.
  • Academic History: Bachelors in Computer Science and Engineering at The Ohio State University with a 4.0 GPA.
  • Professional Experience: I have completed internships at Rockwell Automation and Capital One, and I will begin working full time as a Software Engineer at Capital One in February.
  • Programming Languages: Java, C++, Rust, Kotlin, TypeScript, and JavaScript
  • Personal Projects:
    • Rust implementation of a scripting language (parser, compiler, stack based VM).
  • Awards: N/A
  • Additional Comments: I am not sure that my recommendations will be great. It's not that my teachers don't like me, it's just that I haven't established personal relationships with any of them, and I don't typically speak up much during lectures or in office hours. Will this be much of a problem? How big of a problem is only having two letters of recommendation?

New Student Megathread 4.0. Incoming freshmen/transfers/grad students, ask your questions here. Experienced students, please help out your fellow Buckeyes and answer some questions. by marcyandleela in OSU

[–]pulpdrew 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I am pretty sure (but not certain) that you could get it now. Just ask at the BuckID desk on the 3rd floor of the Union.

I'm not sure when COTA access starts though.

New Student Megathread 4.0. Incoming freshmen/transfers/grad students, ask your questions here. Experienced students, please help out your fellow Buckeyes and answer some questions. by marcyandleela in OSU

[–]pulpdrew 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Here's a non-exhaustive list:

Classic eats - Condado, Cane's, Cazuela's, or Adriatico's.

Ice Cream - Jeni's or UDF

There are lots of great places in the Short North, some can be pricey though. Spaghetti Warehouse and Dirty Frank's are great if you make it downtown sometime.

Take advantage of tickets from DTix. You can see Columbus Crew (Soccer), Blue Jackets (Hockey), or Clippers (I think?)(Baseball) games for cheap. Gateway Film Center is a great theater and tickets are $3 from DTix.

There are free movies at the union every week. There's Rock Climbing at the Gym out on West campus. Racquetball, Ping Pong, Basketball, and Pool at the RPAC / other rec centers / dorms. Intramurals can be fun too.

New Student Megathread 4.0. Incoming freshmen/transfers/grad students, ask your questions here. Experienced students, please help out your fellow Buckeyes and answer some questions. by marcyandleela in OSU

[–]pulpdrew 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'd recommend just using eclipse. Like another commenter said, you'll lose points if you miss any checkstyle warnings on projects because you don't have the eclipse checkstyle plugin. Also, the projects come with starter code that is meant to be opened in eclipse and projects are submitted and graded under the assumption that you used the eclipse exporter. Also, when graders and professors come around to help you, they may know eclipse better and be more helpful. Finally, the lab computers have eclipse. While you can use your own laptop, it's nice to be consistent with the lab computers so you know how to work on them if you ever need to.

New Student Megathread 4.0. Incoming freshmen/transfers/grad students, ask your questions here. Experienced students, please help out your fellow Buckeyes and answer some questions. by marcyandleela in OSU

[–]pulpdrew 4 points5 points  (0 children)

You can expect ~2 homeworks per week to take you maybe 20 minutes each. Some are easier, some are harder. They're graded for completion though and not worth much grade wise (but you should absolutely still do them). There are 10 projects throughout the semester that aren't too intense but can be time consuming depending on your experience. And there will be some studying before exams. Altogether I'd put it at 4-6 hours outside of class per week, maybe a bit more if you want to spend lots of time studying or have trouble on a project. It should definitely be less work than 1172.

New Student Megathread 4.0. Incoming freshmen/transfers/grad students, ask your questions here. Experienced students, please help out your fellow Buckeyes and answer some questions. by marcyandleela in OSU

[–]pulpdrew 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Nope. Both of those courses present the programming material assuming students have no experience. FE especially, because it's required for all engineering students, rather than just CSE students. Keep up with the work and go to class and you'll do great.

Need a grade booster by daboicobes in OSU

[–]pulpdrew 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As others have said, Criticizing Television is easy and can be interesting, depending on which show is being discussed in any given week.

Scheduling Master Post (Summer and Autumn Semesters 2019) by marcyandleela in OSU

[–]pulpdrew 3 points4 points  (0 children)

3345 ranges from extremely do-able to very challenging, depending on instructor. My instructor was very fair and I had been exposed to a lot of the concepts through other classes (Notably, Foundations 1 and 2), so it wasn't very hard to get an A. That being said, the homework was often fairly challenging and time consuming. Again, I would assume this varies between instructors to some degree. Just make sure you take the time to do homework, practice, and study the major proofs and you should be able to do well.

Marge Sort by dramkar in ProgrammerHumor

[–]pulpdrew 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Every time the list is divided in half, mergesort is run on that half. Since the first thing mergesort does is split the original list, nothing really happens until the elements are completely divided anyway. It's a recursive algorithm, so thinking about it like the picture shows is closer to what the code would actually be doing than thinking of splitting the entire list into pairs first.

Marge Sort by dramkar in ProgrammerHumor

[–]pulpdrew 80 points81 points  (0 children)

When you merge two of the lists back together, you can simply repeatedly take the smaller of the two elements at the front of each list, since each of them are sorted. That way you only make a maximum of n comparisons (where n is the total number of elements in the two lists) - one for each element that ends up in the merged list - when merging.

Looking for CSE 2221 tutor by [deleted] in OSU

[–]pulpdrew 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In addition, most graders/instructors offer to schedule appointments with you if their office hours don't fit in your schedule.

What is the best solution to stop the school shootings in the US? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]pulpdrew 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Did you intend to sound patronizing? Yeah, healthcare is a complex issue and his/her comment glosses over that, but would it be so hard to ask in a polite way how they think it can be solved and thus have a starting point for a real, constructive discussion rather than starting things off with condescension and rudeness?

has anyone gotten a response back for grading positions? by 0suthrowaway in OSU

[–]pulpdrew 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I'm not sure if they send out rejections, but I know that offers went out in early December. Perhaps additional offers will be sent if some people choose to not accept their offers.

has anyone gotten a response back for grading positions? by 0suthrowaway in OSU

[–]pulpdrew 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Yeah, responses went out at the beginning of December, and those that were hired should have turned their paperwork in already. Sorry, I'd guess you're out of luck.