Join 📚 Josh Beckman's Highlights

A batch of the best highlights from what Josh's read, .

Ultimately, I decided not to, and developed the idea that I should identify the lessons I didn’t want to learn from life, and simply choose not to learn them. My intent was not necessarily to evaluate whether a certain lesson was true or false in a given context, rather that there are certain lessons that are true in some scenarios, but learning them forms a limiting belief. Limiting belief, founded on a circumstantially true lesson, can change the slope of your future in unpleasant ways.

Lessons Not Worth Learning.

lethain.com

Before using dried fruit I rehydrate it in a bowl of water with a splash of vinegar (otherwise it can be too dense and chewy).

Six Seasons

Joshua McFadden

Let's think about that cache again: when that one node is down, overloaded, busy being deployed, etc that object is not available. This property can make operating high hit-rate caches and storage systems particularly difficult: any kind of deployment or change can look to clients like a kind of rolling outage. However, with erasure coding, single failures (or indeed any M−k number of failures) have no availability impact.

Erasure Coding Versus Tail Latency

marcbrooker@gmail.com (Marc Brooker)

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