Пятый эпизод подкаста SREды по средам. Говорим про мониторинги и алертинги.
4 золотые метрики: latency, traffic, errors, saturation. Что такое sev1/sev2/sev3 в Амазоне или когда на разбор полетов приходил VP? Про жизнь на дежурствах с пейджером и alert fatigue. Про что на самом деле должны прилетать алерты, а про что не должны? Зачем нужны алерты на производную от бюджета на ошибки. Обо всем этом и многом другом в 5 выпуске подкаста SREды по средам.
Пятый эпизод подкаста SREды по средам. Говорим про мониторинги и алертинги.
4 золотые метрики: latency, traffic, errors, saturation. Что такое sev1/sev2/sev3 в Амазоне или когда на разбор полетов приходил VP? Про жизнь на дежурствах с пейджером и alert fatigue. Про что на самом деле должны прилетать алерты, а про что не должны? Зачем нужны алерты на производную от бюджета на ошибки. Обо всем этом и многом другом в 5 выпуске подкаста SREды по средам.
In general, many financial experts support their clients’ desire to buy cryptocurrency, but they don’t recommend it unless clients express interest. “The biggest concern for us is if someone wants to invest in crypto and the investment they choose doesn’t do well, and then all of a sudden they can’t send their kids to college,” says Ian Harvey, a certified financial planner (CFP) in New York City. “Then it wasn’t worth the risk.” The speculative nature of cryptocurrency leads some planners to recommend it for clients’ “side” investments. “Some call it a Vegas account,” says Scott Hammel, a CFP in Dallas. “Let’s keep this away from our real long-term perspective, make sure it doesn’t become too large a portion of your portfolio.” In a very real sense, Bitcoin is like a single stock, and advisors wouldn’t recommend putting a sizable part of your portfolio into any one company. At most, planners suggest putting no more than 1% to 10% into Bitcoin if you’re passionate about it. “If it was one stock, you would never allocate any significant portion of your portfolio to it,” Hammel says.
The S&P 500 slumped 1.8% on Monday and Tuesday, thanks to China Evergrande, the Chinese property company that looks like it is ready to default on its more-than $300 billion in debt. Cries of the next Lehman Brothers—or maybe the next Silverado?—echoed through the canyons of Wall Street as investors prepared for the worst.