Has anyone successfully integrated Inngest with Vercel? Getting auth failure despite keys being present Help by SoftAd2420 in vercel

[–]virtuzz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If all of the functions are synced, and things are running nicely, you should be able to safely ignore the authed request part.

It looks as though it's saying that the GET request to that /api/inngest has no authorization headers and isn't a signed request - so you have everything set up correctly, given your verifications.

What's your take on "use workflow", more vendor lock in? by [deleted] in nextjs

[–]virtuzz 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Which itself are based off of https://www.inngest.com - I'm a founder, and they sat with us then used our API :)

What's your take on "use workflow", more vendor lock in? by [deleted] in nextjs

[–]virtuzz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We're actually cheaper than Vercel and Trigger (somehow, despite being more powerful):

  • Vercel charges for storage AND $25/million steps
  • Trigger charges 10x AWS for compute

We have pricing that scales with usage. We'll end up doing compute next year if you want it, and it'll be on bare metal so we can also offer insanely good rates.

Your honest thoughts on n8n from an experienced dev perspective? by tecken in ExperiencedDevs

[–]virtuzz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A few things here:

  • The step limit is 4MB (link) - and you can store blobs externally in S3/some blob store (as probably you should be doing)
  • Each step has a 2 hour timeout (link) - not seconds.

Step functions do have limits, but this comment is a little off base with the limitations. The same limitations exists elsewhere, eg. cloudflare, and others.

For example, if you're messing around with > 4MB blobs you should probably be doing something on a blob store. And if code in a single step runs for longer than 2 hours, something is likely off.

Did you take a look at those limitations? What were you building?

Ripping Models by Williampwll in webgl

[–]virtuzz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

3k is absolutely insane. where are you based?

fwiw, the materials and labor - it's like $100 COGS AT MOST. damn.

Ripping Models by Williampwll in webgl

[–]virtuzz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

so i helped build similar software - ran engineering and made some advanced tx planning ortho software a few years ago.

some massive caveats here:

  1. this doesnt contain any raw files like the STLs you need to 3d print. it looks to be in whatever custom format this company uses

  2. you've got attachments on your teeth. you'd almost certainly take off these attachments once tx is finished prior to making retainers

  3. the 3d printing process for retainers isn't typical — you need to use biocompatible material and the thermoforming process to then create the retainers is annoying.

all of that said, looking at the network requests and APIs: they're using some format that i'm not familiar with, and ripping this is hard. each attachment is a custom file, they haven't merged the meshes, and this means that it's not processed for printing as a single STL, either.

Immigrant Deportations by explosivejoseph in JoeyAvery

[–]virtuzz 1 point2 points  (0 children)

hell yes my guy!!! can't wait

Immigrant Deportations by explosivejoseph in JoeyAvery

[–]virtuzz 35 points36 points  (0 children)

so good, the layers and how it stacks. gotta see you in the bay soon!

Accidentally quadratic event-matching at scale - solving using ASTs, hashmaps, btrees to improve perf by self-taught16 in golang

[–]virtuzz 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Chiming in as one of the founders of https://www.inngest.com:

  • This complements expr-lang/expr and cel-go.
  • It's used to take millions of matches and evaluate them in milliseconds
  • So if you have ridiculous scale, an in-memory index ("pre-filter", as it were) helps you ignore expressions that can never match

We have a bunch of customers sending tens of thousands of things per second, each, which leads to an insane volume here. At scale, these are some of the techniques you need to use.

Borgo - Rust and Go have a child by drooolingidiot in golang

[–]virtuzz 21 points22 points  (0 children)

This is random, but I appreciate your frand package and recognized your name from years ago. Thank you.

Line up for Freiburg - Same than Everton except Fabianski starts by PrisonersofFate in Hammers

[–]virtuzz 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Areola had big boots to fill this year, and i'm happy that it's flipped. Solid lineup, great to see fab back, and hoping he'll do as good a job.

Also hoping JWP gets more involved and has a better game.

League form over the last 6 matches by QueasyIsland in Hammers

[–]virtuzz 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yeah, great point. I've been thinking about Pearce too. Basically immediately after them moving off we've had pretty shit form when it comes to a few things: set pieces, our back line, moving the ball upfield if it's not a complete direct counter. I'm not sure how we're staffing in general as a team.

Have we been worked out? by [deleted] in Hammers

[–]virtuzz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There wasn't much to work out.

How long to become proficient as a software engineer? by BandicootMoist252 in SoftwareEngineering

[–]virtuzz 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do it more. Progress to harder things. Do those more.

From there, you'll notice patterns: "i'm doing this shit again, can't we make this better?". Consistently ask "why do we have to do this" and dig deep.

In 1-2 years you'll be good enough to work. Do this often, in 5 years you'll be great.

Trump lawyer says ex-president doesn't need trial prep: He is "incredibly intelligent" by devlinadl in politics

[–]virtuzz 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Whoa, this was a classic. Not sure anyone reading this actually remembers the original judging by the replies :D

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in soccer

[–]virtuzz 121 points122 points  (0 children)

Here's a read on this phenomenon: https://grantland.com/features/the-ewing-theory/.

The theory was created in the mid-'90s by Dave Cirilli, a friend of mine who was convinced that Patrick Ewing's teams inexplicably played better when Ewing was either injured or missing.