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I haven't used these budget alerts, maybe they are a pain to implement?

https://docs.cloud.google.com/billing/docs/how-to/budgets

They are still not a spending cap of course.


I think this is making at least some waves in google. I literally just got an email from them with the subject "[Action Advised] Review Google Cloud credential security best practices"

A slew of recommendations, one of them being:

Disable Dormant Keys: Audit your active keys and decommission any that show no activity over the last 30 days.

(Although I don't think this even addresses the underlying issue)


Will someone think of the shareholders? /s


You're not even supposed to take Teslas in a car wash. Countless photos and videos online of flooding Tesla interiors when it's raining or in a car wash.

I don't think water is the platform you want to boast about for Teslas.


As The Register used to call it, these clean-sounding process nodes (15nm, 5nm, 3nm etc) are "marchitecture." Marketing architecture. Reality is much messier.

Thanks for the informative presentation!

thanks for the HN community - the video is how I ended up here and its one of the few social media-esque sites I bother visiting. Taught me a pile of things about coding and CS that weren't in my mechanical engineering degree.

Bloomberg is an interesting news outlet. My whole life I thought of them as purely financial-based reporting. But I've seen lots of lifestyle stuff from them too. And usually well written and interesting angles.

Maybe journalism isn't totally dead yet.


Bloomberg News is at least 2 organizations (and maybe 3+ now).

The original Bloomberg News was purely financial. They then bought Businessweek and published Bloomberg Businessweek but also leveraged the acquisition to build out their general news under the Bloomberg News banner. They’ve had other acquisitions as well to expand their scope. The one I’m particularly interested in is Citylab which means they have probably some of the best urbanism and housing policy related news coverage.


> Maybe journalism isn't totally dead yet.

it never was, nor will ever be :)


they have to start pivoting as their core business model of charging a human being ~$30k USD to access a data terminal is dead with AI.

now instead of having 10 human agents using 10 human terminals that costs $300k you can have 100 AI agents orchestrated into a single terminal that costs $30k

its especially dead because people can begin to develop macros and tools to create alternatives to their system using raw data models, and filters, as well as machine-tools rather than just using transformer models to process reports


AI agents trawling the web: famously incredibly low latency, sourcing news before it hits social media, and accurate enough to be able to stake multi million dollar trades on.

not quite: ai agents accessing the terminal which has the accurate data

you don't need to have large human teams reading the terminals anymore. the human headcount required to consume the bloomberg content is shrinking, not the headcount required to create it


Isn't the biggest value of the terminal really more of an exclusive social network than a stock tracker? You basically buy a rolodex with the who's who of business on speed dial.

That may be true but it has nothing to do with their news media grow out which has been happening for decades.


Thank you, seeing that Instagram video linked in the article is a great detail a lot of people are missing because they won't look past the paywall.

https://www.instagram.com/reel/DBMh48KvHYz/

It is utterly pathetic.


The pricing page for Claude literally says "More usage" for the $17/month pro plan. Doesn't really quantify anything. The usage is whatever they feel like it should be.

And then the very expensive plan says "Choose 5x or 20x more usage than Pro". It's all arbitrary.


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