Linuxduck to [email protected]English • 2 years agoRule, nail in coffinlemmy.blahaj.zoneimagemessage-square97fedilinkarrow-up1593arrow-down12
arrow-up1591arrow-down1imageRule, nail in coffinlemmy.blahaj.zoneLinuxduck to [email protected]English • 2 years agomessage-square97fedilink
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish29•2 years agoAlso could be that they are scaling down systems
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish24•2 years agoIm just saying, he hasn’t been paying bills and it’s the first of the month.
minus-squareLinuxduckOPlinkfedilinkEnglish15•2 years agoYeah something I thought since he was “forced” to buy twitter, was he would just burn it to the ground. What does he care?
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish15•2 years agoYeah. That feels more likely. Twitter has been running for years and likely isn’t a stranger to something like this.
minus-squareThurstylarklinkfedilinkEnglish6•2 years agoLess servers able to serve requests means either get overloaded and have downtime, or rate limit and stay up. Both are bad, but rate limiting is less bad.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilinkEnglish1•2 years agoI see, I guess at that scale API requests add up. I suppose it is a solution, and if replies don’t count, the limits are rather reasonable.
minus-squareThurstylarklinkfedilinkEnglish3•edit-22 years agoYeah, exactly. Also worth mentioning, the scale of Twitter also means that they have contractual obligations when it comes to uptime (for advertisers etc), so downtime could be very costly indeed.
minus-square@animelivesmatterlinkEnglish2•2 years agoIt’s almost as though the mass exodus he bragged about causing has consequences
Also could be that they are scaling down systems
Im just saying, he hasn’t been paying bills and it’s the first of the month.
Yeah something I thought since he was “forced” to buy twitter, was he would just burn it to the ground. What does he care?
Yeah. That feels more likely. Twitter has been running for years and likely isn’t a stranger to something like this.
Why would that affect these metrics?
Less servers able to serve requests means either get overloaded and have downtime, or rate limit and stay up.
Both are bad, but rate limiting is less bad.
I see, I guess at that scale API requests add up. I suppose it is a solution, and if replies don’t count, the limits are rather reasonable.
Yeah, exactly.
Also worth mentioning, the scale of Twitter also means that they have contractual obligations when it comes to uptime (for advertisers etc), so downtime could be very costly indeed.
It’s almost as though the mass exodus he bragged about causing has consequences