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It is exciting to see progress in this space and new ways of thinking infrastructure, kudos to everyone!!

My only hope is that we learned and we don't end up managing things like GH repositories or Pagerduty schedules.


I was so sad when increment sent its last issue in November


Oh, I didn't realize it ended. Bummer, I enjoyed keeping those on my desk to read occasionally.


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I love this projects because they aim to enforce best practices. I particular like pre-commit.com. Fairly easy to set up and a large variety of plugins already.


Congrats on this launch pretty exited to see its evolution



2cents about this:

1. If you are setting up Sentinel with puppet you can do audit of a file instead of modifying it on every run http://puppetlabs.com/blog/all-about-auditing-with-puppet this way you can install, configure and start sentinel and puppet will notice that the content changed. You can decide if you want to change the file or if you would like puppet to notice about it.

2. About sentinel, don't know how you are triggering the failover but we discovered a bug on versions prior to 2.8.12 on manual failovers, https://groups.google.com/forum/#!searchin/redis-db/rhommel/... so it was fixed in 2.8.12 and never seen redis taking more than a second.


They mentioned AWS direct connect which helps to reduce latency.



We won't see IPV6 for the next 10 years or so.


The US is at 8% IPv6, I think that's enough of a base of early adopters that I could believe as soon as there was some actual pain involved with v4 we'd see some fast changeover.

In other words, I believe the limiting factor on v6 adoption is no longer technical or interop, instead it's lack of problems with v4.


I have an IPv6 enabled home internet connection, and can connect to IPv6 enabled websites with it, and there's no 6-to-4 conversion or having an OS level tunnel to Hurricane Electric.


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