
Mobilfunk: Vodafone passt Geschwindigkeitsangaben an
Ab Februar 2024 nennt Vodafone niedrigere Maximalraten. Das gilt nur bei der Bewerbung der Mobilfunk-Tarife, in der Praxis ändert sich für Kunden nichts. (Vodafone, Mobilfunk)
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Ab Februar 2024 nennt Vodafone niedrigere Maximalraten. Das gilt nur bei der Bewerbung der Mobilfunk-Tarife, in der Praxis ändert sich für Kunden nichts. (Vodafone, Mobilfunk)
Lineares Erzählen war im Serienfernsehen lang verpönt. Der Produzent von Star Trek: The Next Generation musste um seinen Cliffhanger regelrecht kämpfen. (Star Trek, SQL)
Keine umständlichen Notlösungen mehr über den Browser: Apple erlaubt ab sofort und weltweit das Spielestreaming auf iPhone und iPad per App. (Spielestreaming, Apple)
One weather site’s sudden struggles, and musings on why change isn’t always good.
Enlarge / Ish is on fire, yo. (credit: Tim Macpherson / Getty Images)
Since 2017, in what spare time I have (ha!), I help my colleague Eric Berger host his Houston-area weather forecasting site, Space City Weather. It’s an interesting hosting challenge—on a typical day, SCW does maybe 20,000–30,000 page views to 10,000–15,000 unique visitors, which is a relatively easy load to handle with minimal work. But when severe weather events happen—especially in the summer, when hurricanes lurk in the Gulf of Mexico—the site’s traffic can spike to more than a million page views in 12 hours. That level of traffic requires a bit more prep to handle.
Hey, it's Space City Weather! (credit: Lee Hutchinson)
For a very long time, I ran SCW on a backend stack made up of HAProxy for SSL termination, Varnish Cache for on-box caching, and Nginx for the actual web server application—all fronted by Cloudflare to absorb the majority of the load. (I wrote about this setup at length on Ars a few years ago for folks who want some more in-depth details.) This stack was fully battle-tested and ready to devour whatever traffic we threw at it, but it was also annoyingly complex, with multiple cache layers to contend with, and that complexity made troubleshooting issues more difficult than I would have liked.
So during some winter downtime two years ago, I took the opportunity to jettison some complexity and reduce the hosting stack down to a single monolithic web server application: OpenLiteSpeed.
One weather site’s sudden struggles, and musings on why change isn’t always good.
Enlarge / Ish is on fire, yo. (credit: Tim Macpherson / Getty Images)
Since 2017, in what spare time I have (ha!), I help my colleague Eric Berger host his Houston-area weather forecasting site, Space City Weather. It’s an interesting hosting challenge—on a typical day, SCW does maybe 20,000–30,000 page views to 10,000–15,000 unique visitors, which is a relatively easy load to handle with minimal work. But when severe weather events happen—especially in the summer, when hurricanes lurk in the Gulf of Mexico—the site’s traffic can spike to more than a million page views in 12 hours. That level of traffic requires a bit more prep to handle.
Hey, it's Space City Weather! (credit: Lee Hutchinson)
For a very long time, I ran SCW on a backend stack made up of HAProxy for SSL termination, Varnish Cache for on-box caching, and Nginx for the actual web server application—all fronted by Cloudflare to absorb the majority of the load. (I wrote about this setup at length on Ars a few years ago for folks who want some more in-depth details.) This stack was fully battle-tested and ready to devour whatever traffic we threw at it, but it was also annoyingly complex, with multiple cache layers to contend with, and that complexity made troubleshooting issues more difficult than I would have liked.
So during some winter downtime two years ago, I took the opportunity to jettison some complexity and reduce the hosting stack down to a single monolithic web server application: OpenLiteSpeed.
Spiele brauchen so viel Rechenleistung wie möglich. Sobald es schnellere Chips von AMD gibt, will Asus die Konsole mit neuester Technik ausstatten. (Asus, Prozessor)
The Libre Computer Solitude is a Raspberry Pi lookalike that’s powered by an Amlogic S905XD3 quad-core ARM Cortex-A55 processor with Mali-G31 MP2 graphics and a 1.2 TOPS AI accelerator. It’s available for purchase from LoverPi, which is se…
The Libre Computer Solitude is a Raspberry Pi lookalike that’s powered by an Amlogic S905XD3 quad-core ARM Cortex-A55 processor with Mali-G31 MP2 graphics and a 1.2 TOPS AI accelerator. It’s available for purchase from LoverPi, which is selling a model with 4GB of LPDDR4 memory for $45. There’s also a slightly cheaper 2GB model, but […]
The post Libre Computer Solitude is a single-board PC with and Amlogic S905D3 processor and a Raspberry Pi 3-style design appeared first on Liliputing.
Durch ein fehlerhaftes Updatepaket bekamen Windows-10-User im November 2023 einen Bug mitgeliefert. Der wird jetzt gefixt. (Windows 10, Windows)
In Alltagssituationen, etwa beim Beseitigen von Krümeln oder Tierhaaren, bietet der Handstaubsauger von Shark eine unkomplizierte Lösung. (Technik/Hardware)
Mit dem DMA wollte die EU die Macht von Apple brechen, stattdessen tanzt der Konzern der EU auf der Nase herum. Das zeigt die Notwendigkeit einer Regulierung im Sinne der Nutzer. Von Sebastian Grüner und Tobias Költzsch (DMA, Apple)