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Brazilian living in NL, experienced in both. I think biggest difference is Tikkie doesn't give you an easy identifier. Great for privacy, but being able to send money to your email/phone number makes a difference for some real time use cases. QR code helps, but it is not the same.


IBAN works pretty ok as an identifier when you need that. Bank transfers between Dutch banks are almost instant anyway


It is instant provided your financial institution works within the SEPA Instant transfer system


Since last year, all EU banks have to support SEPA Instant Transfer, both receiving & sending, at the same price as a usual transfer (Instant Payments Regulation 2024/886)


If only https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EPC_QR_code supported a sepa instant bit so that one could just show a qr code, scan it with whatever payer banking app and authorize the sepa instant payment.


This is what Ideal/Wero does. Because this is the standard for webshops in the Netherlands (and rapidly expanding to the whole EU) the only gap left to fill was that of consumer-to-consumer transfers with just a QR code to scan. Tikkie I mentioned above solves that well enough in the Netherlands, although that bank-run app is horribly laden with stupid ads and deals you can't seem to turn off.


Honeycomb. Amazing observability tool and reasonably cheaper/better than alternatives.


The PEV2 is open source and give you a good visualization. I never used this pgmustard to compare.

https://explain.dalibo.com/


Migrating primary keys from int to bigint is feasible. Requires some preparation and custom code, but zero downtime.

I'm managing a big migration following mostly this recipe, with a few tweaks: http://zemanta.github.io/2021/08/25/column-migration-from-in...

FKs, indexes and constraints in general make the process more difficult, but possible. The data migration took some hours in my case, but no need to be fast.

AFAIK GitLab has tooling to run tasks after upgrade to make it work anywhere in a version upgrade.


It says more about brazilian municipalities than about chatgpt. Probably nobody read this one and many other voted documents.


It's a one page document that deals with a very specific situation - if a human were to write it, I'm sure they would come up with pretty much the same thing. I actually have no problems with this particular case


Nice demo in your sales page. Love it!


True, I really liked the landing page.


Thanks, glad you liked it!


Location: Brazil Remote: Yes, remote only Willing to relocate: No Technologies: mostly Python, but always hacking with other things Résumé/CV: https://www.linkedin.com/in/iurisilvio/ Email: iurisilvio@gmail.com

Worked as CTO for one company from the begining and it was acquired by a big local retailer. Now doing consulting for local companies.


I think most companies wouldn't even consider it a security bug.


New Relic. Unfortunately it reduced their free plan (and the paid plan is expensive), but I was always amazed about their free features. I'm still didn't find a good alternative. :(


I'm using it as a proxy with IP rotation. It is not a perfect solution, but solved my problem more than one time.

It is a lot cheaper than a "proxy as a service".


I thought lambda was configured to use a single exit IP that rotates every 4 hours. How many IP's are you getting via this method, and are you using any tricks (multiple accounts, etc) to get a wider variety of IPs?


To be honest, I have no idea. Maybe I'm even wrong about why it works.

I have a toy service with ~200k requests/day to a public service and I was blocked all the time.

After I changed to use API Gateway + Lambda as a proxy, never had these problems again. I just monitor the 4xx and 5xx errors and they are almost zero now.


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