Out of interest, what makes you think there's still money left on the table in this domain, given all the existing products? Or rather, what do you feel all the existing products lack?
This is one of those examples that I liken to the dry cleaning business.
In any given city there may be lots of dry cleaners available. Some will be much better than others (service, performance, etc.). Some will be much cheaper than others. Some may be the perfect combination of all these things.
Unfortunately, we often don't know where the best one is. And perhaps because of another person's suggestion "affiliate marketing", it is now virtually impossible to search online to get actual reviews of things (as there are now more SEO-d review sites which are just thinly veiled affiliate marketing sites).
So we use the service we see nearby or stumble upon. It may not be the best, but we don't really know better.
The same applies to so many things in life, business or otherwise (people, friends, relationships). Thus, yet-another-monitoring-service can succeed if it gets enough customers, even if there are much better services out there.
In a slightly similar theme, my wife and I had a terrible experience with a BnB we booked through Booking.com about a year ago. We left what we felt was a balanced review and a 7/10 rating. We were mostly happy with our stay (which we mentioned in the review) barring some issues with noise emanating from the pool and staff kitchen, and the quality of the breakfast (stale, cold, and flavourless).
What followed was a flood of emails, WhatsApps, and phone calls from the owners/managers attempting to emotionally blackmail us by telling us that people would be fired due to our "low score" of 7/10, unless we could somehow either retract or improve the rating.
We left the review as-is and blocked them, but it makes us think twice about leaving reviews now just to avoid the potential harassment. I feel review systems are slightly broken, and the incentives are in the wrong place.
Title is misleading - these domain names are not "free" from a monetary perspective, which would be the common association IMO. They're freely available for purchase, as in the domain name is not currently registered.
This topic inspired my co-founder and I to build dbsupervisor.com as a tool to monitor database health, and offer opinionated suggestions to improve product uptime and performance.
As others have pointed out, traditional DBA roles are fading away due to cloud offerings abstracting many of the problems DBA’s would otherwise be responsible for. Hardware is cheaper and more available which means that companies throw more RAM/CPU at their problems, whilst areas like index planning, performance tuning, query optimisation, and resource monitoring take a back seat. In our experience, this eventually catches up to you in the form of poor performance and unhappy customers.
We believe that tech can augment most of the insights offered by a traditional DBA and help avoid these pains early on, especially for smaller teams with limited database expertise. We’re currently in private beta, but will be opening up more broadly in the coming weeks. We’d love to get your feedback on our approach - sign up for the beta or AMA if you have any questions!
Recently I’ve thought it might be good to go back into consulting as a Data Architect. I would happily partner up with a good product if it there was (hands waving) “synergy”...
We tried ReScript 2 years ago at work when it was still in its infancy, and still named ReasonML. Besides many other gripes at the time, one of the biggest pain points was the lack of any async/await support, and a very cumbersome Promise wrapper.
Unfortunately, it looks like not much has changed[0], and you’re still forced into writing the equivalent of unwieldy Promise chains.
I ended up migrating us onto Typescript, which was a great move for us. The seamless interop with JavaScript combined with the massively active community makes it a no-brainer over other attempts at strongly-typed JS, IMO.
I find it very confusing why they don't embrace the JavaScript echo system. I'm all for a new syntax that does away with some of the bad parts but if you can't async/await, well then you can't really do I/O, and if you can't do that then your app isn't particular fun to use.
That said, I get that there's callbacks for everything and that you can do I/O with callbacks but it's not fun and if that is your only option you're going to need some external Flux "store" to manage all your state.
Edit: I should also add that I understand that there are people who find the async/await paradigm to be bad but I don't think we have much of an alternative when it comes to JavaScript or if you want an alternative, we'll then you are hardcore enough to be fine with just callbacks.
Can’t fully recall the landscape of things back then, but I think you’re right.
I remember needing to navigate between BuckleScript and ReasonML docs (which were terrible at the time) to make sense of the available standard library.
I don’t tend to do new year resolutions, but 2022 will see my first attempt at building my own business, which I’m incredibly excited for. I’ve been preparing to do so for a while now, and I finally decided to take the plunge this year. I hope to have something to Show HN soon!
Otherwise, a personal goal of mine going into 2022 is to become more aware of my mental and physical well-being. More specifically, knowing my personal limits and being more open towards my friends and family about how I’m feeling. I spent a few consecutive years working too hard without proper balance, and it really took its toll on me this year. I’ve been taking a small break over December between wrapping up my previous job and starting my business ideas next year. It’s been great to have zero mindshare spent on work for a while!
Out of interest, what makes you think there's still money left on the table in this domain, given all the existing products? Or rather, what do you feel all the existing products lack?