#telemetry
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dxrlingluv · 1 month ago
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Uh, you did NOT have to break my heart with Telemachus x reader "Not Me, But Her". 😭 Also, just discovered you, and I love your writing! Im just here to beg for a part 2 for "Not Me, But Her". Of course, this doesnt mean that you HAVE to.
If you're out of ideas for it, I have a suggestion(NOT an order, if you dont want to write this, you dont HAVE to. You might already have something in mind...) Anyhow, maybe the reader decides to give up(for now) on Telemachus. So they grow colder towards him, and find a new person(a suitor or another servant) and treat them as they did Telemachus in the past. Now, Telemachus starts to miss their warm personality towards him. Lyra doesnt even have to try and steal Telemachus. She might help and support Tele, which, of course, the reader misunderstands as them being together. So Tele tries to win back over the reader.
Sorry its a bit long. Anyhow, you wrote that you were sad, so I hope you're doing better now! Even if you dont write this, Ill still love your writing!
Our Future
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A/N : I was planning on being evil and make this an angst with no comfort haha, but then I saw the support and the comforting words I’ve been receiving, so I thought, “why not make them happy?”. Telemachus art is from Duvetbox!
WARNING : Part 2 of “Not me, but Her”. Slight angst, happy ending, Fem!Reader.
Word Count: 3.6k
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The grief that shattered you in the torchlit corridor did not break you. Instead, when the tears finally dried, leaving salty tracks on your skin like riverbeds after a drought, something new and hard settled in their place. It was resolve, cold and clear as winter ice. You had spent years pouring your warmth, your hope, your very essence into a vessel that would not hold it, and you were left empty. No more.
The decision was not made in anger, but in a profound, soul-deep exhaustion. It was a matter of survival. The next morning, you rose and began the deliberate, painful process of building a wall around your heart. When you saw Telemachus across the courtyard, his brow furrowed with the familiar weight of his burdens, the old impulse to rush to his side, to offer a kind word or a cup of water, rose in your throat like a phantom ache. You swallowed it down, turning on your heel and focusing on the stone flags beneath your feet, one step at a time, until the urge subsided. You learned to make your face a placid mask, your voice a neutral current, and your eyes—your eyes never truly met his again. You were a ghost in his halls, impeccable in your duties, but utterly devoid of the spirit he had never truly noticed until it was gone.
That spirit, the innate warmth and care that was so much a part of you, needed a place to rest. It found a quiet harbor in Arion. He was the junior assistant to the palace scribe, a young man from a lesser family that had lost its lands and fortunes two generations prior. He possessed a quiet intelligence and a gentle demeanor, but in the boisterous, political viper's nest of the palace, his quietness made him invisible. You understood that kind of invisibility. He was perpetually overworked, his tunic often bearing the smudge of spilled ink, his dark hair falling into eyes that held a permanent, thoughtful sadness.
Your friendship began with a bruised apple. It was an offering made on a whim, a simple act of redirecting a kindness that no longer had a home. But Arion's reaction was unlike any you had ever received. His face, when he took the apple, was a study in stunned gratitude.
The next day, he sought you out. He found you tending to the potted herbs near the kitchens, and he held out a small, smooth piece of papyrus. "It is not much," he said, his voice soft and hesitant. "But my master discards the ends of the scrolls. I thought... I thought you might like it. For lists, or... or for drawing, if you are so inclined."
You took the small, precious gift, your fingers brushing his. For the first time in a long time, you felt a warmth that was not your own, but one that was being offered to you. "Thank you, Arion," you said, and a small, genuine smile touched your lips without you even willing it to. "No one has ever given me a gift like this before."
A bond formed, quiet and steady. It was a friendship woven from small, shared moments. You would save him a heel of bread; he would read you a line of poetry from a scroll he was copying. You would help him re-roll a particularly cumbersome map; he would tell you stories of the old gods he was researching. You found solace in his calm presence, and he seemed to find light in your gentle attention. In a world of loud, demanding men, his quiet respect was a balm. Your relationship wasn't one of fiery passion or aching romance; it was something perhaps more profound—a mutual recognition of each other's worth, a quiet haven of kindness in a harsh world.
Telemachus, meanwhile, was drowning. The great sea of his anxieties had not lessened, but the small, personal buoy he'd never realized he had was gone. He'd finish a grueling session with his sword master, muscles screaming, throat parched, and would instinctively scan the courtyard for your familiar form. But you were never there. The cool waterskin no longer appeared as if by magic at his elbow. The silence in his study was no longer just quiet; it was empty. He felt your absence as a draft in a warm room, a persistent chill he couldn't locate.
He began to watch you, trying to understand the shift. He saw you work, your efficiency more pronounced now that it was unsoftened by any personal warmth. He saw the cool, dismissive nod you gave him, the same you gave any other servant. It pricked at his pride, then, more alarmingly, at something deeper. He felt... ignored. And he was stunned to realize how much it bothered him.
The vague sense of loss sharpened into a blade of pure jealousy the first time he saw you with Arion. They were sharing a bench in the shade of an olive tree, eating a simple meal of bread and cheese. You said something, and Arion let out a soft, breathy laugh. In response, you smiled at him—a gentle, luminous smile that crinkled the corners of your eyes. It was a smile of pure, unguarded contentment. A smile he had never, not once, earned for himself. He felt a hot, possessive anger rise in his chest, so potent it startled him. Why were you smiling like that for a lowly scribe's assistant?
The sightings became a form of exquisite torture. A week later, he saw you both in the tapestry room. Arion was helping you mend a tear in a heavy drape, your heads bent close together, your fingers working in tandem. As you finished, you noticed an ink smudge on Arion's cheek. With a familiar ease that bespoke countless similar moments, you reached up and gently wiped it away with your thumb. The casual intimacy of the gesture, so simple and so profoundly domestic, sent a jolt through Telemachus. It was a touch without artifice or agenda, a touch born of genuine affection. He had commanded you for years, but he had never known that tenderness.
The final, crushing blow came during a cool evening. He was seeking solitude on a secluded balcony, his mind churning with plans to deal with Antinous, the cruelest of the suitors. Below, in the small, walled garden reserved for the queen, he saw two figures. It was you and Arion, walking slowly along the path. You were speaking, your hands gesturing as you told a story, your face animated in the moonlight. Arion listened with an attentiveness that was almost reverent. Telemachus couldn't hear your words, but he didn't need to. He was witnessing you give the most precious part of yourself—your thoughts, your spirit, your unguarded presence—to someone else. He remembered all the times he had cut you off, dismissed your words, or simply turned away. He had treated your voice like background noise, and here was someone else treating it like music.
Just then, Lyra appeared at his side, holding a woolen cloak. "My lord, you will catch a chill," she said, her voice full of sincere concern. He barely heard her. His eyes were locked on the scene below. You glanced up then, not at him, but in the general direction of the palace, and saw him standing there with Lyra draping the cloak over his shoulders. He saw your expression falter for only a second before settling back into a calm neutrality. He watched you turn back to Arion, say something soft, and continue your walk, leaving Telemachus standing on the balcony, feeling more alone than ever. He knew what you must have thought, and the bitter irony was that Lyra's kindness felt like ashes compared to the warmth he now understood he had lost from you.
He could not bear it another day. He sought you out, finding you as you were leaving the main hall. He stepped into your path, his heart a frantic drum against his ribs.
"Y/N," he said, his voice strained.
You stopped, your arms empty, but you held them as if guarding your chest. "My lord," you said, your voice a placid stream flowing over cold stones. Your eyes were on his chin, not his face.
"I have been a fool," he began, the words rushing out of him, raw and unpracticed. "A blind, arrogant fool. The kindness you showed me... the care... I took it for granted. I treated it as my due, not the gift that it was. I see that now. I see it when I see you with... him."
You were silent for a long moment, simply absorbing his words. He saw a flicker of the old pain in your eyes, a deep, ancient sorrow. But it was distant, like a storm long past.
"And what is it you want, my lord?" you asked, your question devoid of accusation. It was a simple, honest inquiry.
"I want...," he faltered, the enormity of his request finally dawning on him. "I miss you, Y/N. I miss the person you were."
Your gaze finally lifted to meet his, and for the first time in months, you let him see. But what he saw was not the adoring, hopeful servant he remembered. He saw a woman, calm and whole, whose peace was no longer tied to his notice.
"My lord," you said, and your voice was softer now, tinged not with coldness, but with a sad wisdom. "The person you miss... I had to let her go. She would not have survived. Her heart was not meant for a world that saw her kindness as a convenience." You took a small, steadying breath. "The warmth you are looking for is not something I can give you anymore. I have learned to build my own fire, and to share it with those who value its light."
You offered him a small, final nod, one that held not dismissal, but a strange kind of pity. "I wish you well in your search, Telemachus."
You used his name, without his title, for the first and for what you hope will be the last time. Then you walked away, your steps unhurried, leaving him standing alone in the grand, empty hall. He did not call after you. The finality in your voice was absolute. He was left with nothing but the crushing, monumental weight of his own regret. He had been given a treasure, and in his blindness, he had let it slip through his fingers, only to watch, helpless, as another man recognized its worth and gently picked it up. The pain of it was a lesson, sharp and brutal, and he knew with a certainty that would haunt him for the rest of his days that this was the beginning of his wisdom.
In the wake of your final, quiet conversation, a strange peace settled between you and Telemachus. The tension did not vanish, but it transformed from a brittle, painful thing into a long, somber silence, filled with unspoken understanding. Telemachus, for his part, accepted the boundary you had drawn with a maturity that surprised you. He ceased his attempts to breach your walls, and instead, took to watching you from a distance.
From his vantage point, he began to truly see you for the first time. He watched your friendship with Arion, and though a bitter pang of regret twisted in his gut with every shared smile he witnessed, he forced himself to look past his own pain. He saw the easy camaraderie, the mutual respect, the way you both seemed to draw strength from each other's quiet presence. He saw Arion listen to you with rapt attention and saw you comfort Arion with a gentle hand on his arm. Telemachus began to admire the resilience you had found, the peace you had carved out for yourself without him. The admiration was a painful, humbling lesson, and he poured that bitter education into his duties, facing the suitors with a new, steelier resolve born of profound personal regret.
You, in turn, could not help but notice the change in him. The frantic, boyish energy was gone, replaced by a deep, pensive gravity. You saw him treat the other servants with a consideration that had never been there before, asking their names, thanking them for their service. He no longer carried himself with the thoughtless privilege of a prince, but with the weary weight of a man learning the cost of his own actions. One evening, you saw him staring into the fire, his expression so full of lonely remorse that a forgotten warmth stirred in your chest—not the old, aching devotion, but a new, more complicated empathy. The ice around your heart had not vanished, but it was beginning to show cracks.
Your friendship with Arion, meanwhile, deepened into a sanctuary. One afternoon, while you were helping him sort a stack of sun-bleached papyrus scrolls, the sound of a lyre, accompanied by a clear, confident voice, drifted in from the courtyard. It was Ctesippus, one of the more flamboyant suitors, known more for his poetry and preening than his outright brutality. Arion froze, his hands stilling over a scroll, his gaze lost in the distance. A soft, mournful sigh escaped his lips.
"His voice is as clear as the streams on Mount Neriton," Arion murmured, almost to himself.
You looked from the suitor back to your friend's wistful face, and understanding bloomed. "Arion," you said gently, placing a hand on his arm. "Your heart is far away."
He looked at you, his gentle eyes clouded with a hopeless affection. "Is it so obvious?" he whispered, a sad smile touching his lips. "He is beautiful, is he not? Like a verse from Homer brought to life. And I am... a scribe's boy with ink on his fingers. His world is so far from mine, Y/N." He confessed his quiet, impossible crush, a secret he had held close in the lonely chambers of his heart.
You squeezed his arm, your own past heartaches giving you the perfect words of comfort. "Your heart is good and true, Arion. That is worth more than all the lyres in Ithaca. I am glad you trust me with its keeping." In that moment, your bond was cemented not as lovers, but as something arguably deeper: two souls weathering the same storm, offering each other the simple, profound gift of being understood.
Weeks later, Penelope tasked you and Telemachus with a discreet and urgent project. A shipment of rare Phoenician cloth, part of her dowry she wished to protect from the suitors' greedy eyes, needed to be moved from a lower storeroom to a hidden chamber behind her own suite. It was a task that required both strength and subtlety, forcing the two of you into close collaboration.
The first hour was a study in awkward silence. You worked with a detached efficiency, while Telemachus seemed afraid to even breathe too loudly in your presence. But the sheer physicality of the work slowly eroded the formality. As he passed you a heavy, cedar-lined box, his hand brushed yours, and a jolt of startled awareness passed between you. He pulled his hand back as if burned, murmuring a quick apology.
"It is heavy," you said simply, your voice even. "I will take that side."
Slowly, a new rhythm emerged. He began to defer to you. "Do you think this chest will fit through the west passage, Y/N? You know the architecture better than I." He no longer gave orders; he asked for your counsel. He treated you not as a servant, but as a trusted partner. As you worked, a shared memory surfaced—a time in childhood when you had both hidden in this very same secret passage during a game.
A small, hesitant smile touched his lips. "I remember you knew this hiding spot even then. You never told anyone where I was."
"It was a good hiding spot," you replied, and a genuine, answering smile bloomed on your face before you could stop it. It was a small moment, a fleeting truce, but it felt as significant as a sunrise after a long night. The air between you lightened, warmed by the ember of a shared past.
The breaking point for Telemachus came a few days later. He saw you in the garden with Arion. Your friend was clearly distraught, his shoulders slumped in defeat—Ctesippus had likely mocked him or treated him with casual cruelty. You were speaking to him in low, soothing tones, your expression one of fierce, protective loyalty. As you spoke, you reached out and cupped his cheek, tilting his face towards yours, a gesture of profound comfort and solidarity.
From Telemachus's vantage point, it was a devastating tableau. It looked like a lover comforting their heartbroken partner. He saw in that single touch a depth of intimacy he was now certain he could never hope to achieve. He believed, in that moment, that he had lost you completely and irrevocably. The pain was sharp, but it clarified his purpose. He could not keep pining for what was not his. For your sake, and for his own sanity, he had to let you go. Properly.
He found you that evening by the olive tree in the main courtyard, the place that had been the backdrop for so much of your shared history. He approached you not with the desperation of before, but with a somber, settled resolve.
You saw him coming and your heart gave a nervous flutter, but you stood your ground.
"Telemachus," you greeted him quietly.
He stopped a respectful distance away. "I will not keep you," he said, his voice low and steady. "I only... I needed to say something. I have spent these past weeks learning a difficult lesson, one you tried to teach me long ago. I see now what true companionship looks like. The respect. The kindness."
He swallowed, his gaze earnest and filled with a deep, painful sincerity. "I see the happiness you have found with Arion. He is a good and gentle man. He sees you, Y/N, in a way I was too blind to. You deserve that." He took a breath, the words costing him more than you could know. "My chance to be that man has passed. And I accept that. I only wished to say that I hope you will accept my sincerest wish for your future together. May it be long and happy."
You stared at him. The silence stretched, filled only by the chirping of crickets. His speech was so noble, so full of heartfelt, tragic renunciation that it would have been beautiful, were it not so utterly, completely, ridiculously wrong. A strangled sound escaped your throat, a noise somewhere between a gasp and a laugh.
"My future?" you repeated, your voice incredulous. "With Arion?"
He looked confused by your reaction. "Yes? I have seen... you are very close."
You looked at his handsome, earnest, completely bewildered face, and the dam of your composure finally broke. You laughed. It wasn't a small chuckle, but a full, rolling laugh of pure, unadulterated disbelief. You pressed a hand to your mouth, trying to stifle it, but it was no use.
"Telemachus," you finally managed, wiping a tear of mirth from your eye. "Arion is my dearest friend in this world. My brother. And the last person whose heart I would have any claim on." Seeing his utter confusion, you took pity on him. "His affections, my lord, lie with a certain suitor known for his skill with a lyre and his unfortunate choice in company."
The wave of emotions that crashed over Telemachus's face was a sight to behold. Shock. Disbelief. Stunned, dawning comprehension. And then, a wild, electrifying surge of hope so powerful it made him dizzy. All this time, he had been mourning a romance that had never existed.
"So you... you are not...?" he stammered, his princely composure gone.
"No," you said softly, your laughter subsiding into a warm, gentle smile. "We are not."
He looked at you then, truly looked at you, with all the walls between you shattered by the absurdity of it all. He saw the warmth in your eyes, the smile on your lips, and he saw his second chance, shimmering and improbable and more precious than any kingdom.
"Then, Y/N," he said, his voice thick with emotion, stepping closer until he could have reached out and touched you. "If your heart is not taken, and your future is not written..." He paused, his gaze locking with yours. "Would you allow me the honor of trying to earn it? Not as a prince who was a fool, but as a man who would spend a lifetime proving he has learned his lesson. Allow me to court you. Properly. With walks in the garden, and conversations that I will never again cut short. With the respect you have always deserved."
You looked at the man before you—humbled, sincere, and stripped of all his old arrogance. You saw the regret that had carved new lines of character into his face and the hope that now made his eyes shine. The last of the ice melted away, not in a flood, but in a gentle, sun-warmed thaw.
"Yes, Telemachus," you said, and your voice was full of a light he had never heard before. "Yes. I would like that very much."
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il-predestinato · 2 years ago
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Brilliant how Charles managed that race despite Xavi telling him to lift and coast since lap 5. And the way he passed Lewis and then backed Lewis into Yuki was brilliant racing brain:
Telemetry showing Charles lifting the throttle at the Senna 'S' to prevent Hamilton from getting a run at him and leaving Hamilton vulnerable to Tsunoda: 👌
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owithadash1point0 · 8 months ago
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roverjamball · 2 years ago
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Geometric Paper Sculptures from Matthew Shlian
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w2gsolution01 · 17 days ago
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Report Shows OpenTelemetry’s Impact on Go Performance
Observability in software development has become a cornerstone for building reliable and efficient systems. A recent report highlights OpenTelemetry’s impact on Go performance, shedding light on how this open-source observability framework influences the efficiency of applications written in the Go programming language. As Go, also known as Golang, continues to gain traction for its simplicity and performance in cloud-native environments, understanding the implications of integrating tools like OpenTelemetry is crucial for developers aiming to optimize their systems.
This blog explores the findings of the report, diving into how OpenTelemetry affects Go applications, its benefits, challenges, and practical considerations for developers. With observability becoming a non-negotiable aspect of modern software, this analysis provides insights for Go developers seeking to balance performance with robust monitoring.
What is OpenTelemetry and Why It Matters for Go
OpenTelemetry is an open-source project under the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF) that provides a standardized way to collect, process, and export telemetry data, including traces, metrics, and logs. For Go developers, it offers a powerful toolkit to gain visibility into application behavior, especially in distributed systems like microservices architectures. Go’s lightweight concurrency model and fast execution make it a popular choice for high-performance applications, but without proper observability, debugging and optimizing these systems can be challenging.
The report emphasizes that OpenTelemetry’s integration with Go enables developers to instrument their code efficiently, capturing critical data about request latencies, error rates, and system resource usage. This visibility is essential for identifying bottlenecks and ensuring applications run smoothly in production.
The Role of Observability in Go Applications
Go’s design prioritizes simplicity and performance, making it ideal for building scalable systems. However, as applications grow in complexity, developers need tools to monitor and understand their behavior. OpenTelemetry fills this gap by providing a standardized approach to observability, allowing developers to collect telemetry data without relying on proprietary solutions. This standardization is particularly valuable in Go, where minimalism is a core principle, as it aligns with the language’s philosophy of avoiding unnecessary complexity.
Key Findings on OpenTelemetry’s Impact on Go Performance
The report provides a detailed analysis of how OpenTelemetry affects Go applications, focusing on performance metrics such as latency, throughput, and resource consumption. While OpenTelemetry enhances observability, it introduces some overhead, which developers must carefully manage to maintain Go’s hallmark efficiency.
Performance Overhead of Instrumentation
One of the primary concerns for Go developers is the potential performance cost of adding observability. The report reveals that OpenTelemetry’s instrumentation, when properly configured, introduces minimal overhead—typically less than 5% in terms of CPU and memory usage for most workloads. This is a testament to Go’s efficiency and OpenTelemetry’s lightweight design. However, in high-throughput systems processing millions of requests per second, even small overheads can accumulate, requiring developers to optimize their instrumentation strategies.
For instance, the report notes that excessive tracing or poorly configured sampling can increase latency. By using techniques like adaptive sampling, where only a subset of requests is traced, developers can mitigate this impact while still gaining valuable insights.
Benefits of Enhanced Observability
Despite the minor overhead, the report underscores the significant benefits of OpenTelemetry’s impact on Go performance. By providing detailed traces and metrics, OpenTelemetry helps developers pinpoint performance issues quickly. For example, in a case study highlighted in the report, a Go-based microservice reduced its average request latency by 20% after using OpenTelemetry to identify a bottleneck in a database query. This kind of actionable insight is invaluable for maintaining high-performing systems.
Moreover, OpenTelemetry’s compatibility with popular observability platforms like Prometheus, Jaeger, and Grafana allows developers to visualize and analyze data effectively, further enhancing their ability to optimize Go applications.
Challenges of Implementing OpenTelemetry in Go
While the benefits are clear, integrating OpenTelemetry into Go applications is not without challenges. The report outlines several considerations developers must address to ensure successful adoption without compromising performance.
Configuration Complexity
OpenTelemetry’s flexibility comes with a learning curve. Configuring exporters, samplers, and processors requires a deep understanding of both the tool and the application’s architecture. The report notes that misconfigurations, such as overly verbose logging or incorrect sampling rates, can lead to performance degradation. For Go developers, who often prioritize simplicity, this complexity can feel counterintuitive.
To address this, the report recommends starting with minimal instrumentation and gradually expanding as developers become familiar with OpenTelemetry’s components. Using Go-specific libraries, such as the OpenTelemetry Go SDK, can also simplify the process.
Balancing Observability and Performance
Another challenge is striking the right balance between observability and performance. The report highlights that excessive telemetry collection can strain system resources, particularly in resource-constrained environments like edge computing. Developers must carefully select which metrics and traces to collect, focusing on those that provide the most value for debugging and optimization.
Best Practices for Using OpenTelemetry with Go
To maximize the benefits of OpenTelemetry’s impact on Go performance, the report offers several best practices for developers. These strategies help minimize overhead while ensuring robust observability.
Optimize Sampling Strategies
Sampling is a critical factor in managing OpenTelemetry’s performance impact. The report suggests using probabilistic or rate-based sampling to reduce the volume of telemetry data without sacrificing visibility. For high-traffic Go applications, adaptive sampling—where the sampling rate adjusts based on system load—can further optimize performance.
Leverage Context Propagation
Go’s concurrency model, with its goroutines and channels, requires careful handling of request context. OpenTelemetry’s context propagation ensures that telemetry data is correctly associated with the right request, even in highly concurrent systems. The report emphasizes the importance of properly propagating context to avoid gaps in traces, which can obscure performance issues.
Monitor Resource Usage
To prevent unexpected performance hits, developers should monitor the resource usage of OpenTelemetry itself. Tools like Prometheus can track the CPU and memory overhead of instrumentation, allowing developers to fine-tune configurations as needed.
Real-World Applications and Success Stories
The report includes several case studies demonstrating OpenTelemetry’s impact on Go performance in real-world scenarios. One notable example is a fintech company that used OpenTelemetry to optimize a Go-based payment processing system. By analyzing traces, the company identified inefficiencies in its API calls, reducing transaction times by 15% and improving customer satisfaction.
Another case study involves a cloud-native startup that integrated OpenTelemetry into its Go microservices. The detailed metrics provided by OpenTelemetry allowed the team to scale their infrastructure more efficiently, reducing costs while maintaining performance.
Future Outlook for OpenTelemetry and Go
As observability continues to evolve, OpenTelemetry is poised to become a standard tool for Go developers. The report predicts that future improvements in OpenTelemetry’s Go SDK will further reduce overhead and simplify integration. Additionally, advancements in automated instrumentation could make it easier for developers to adopt OpenTelemetry without extensive manual configuration.
The growing adoption of Go in cloud-native and serverless environments also underscores the importance of tools like OpenTelemetry. As more organizations rely on Go for critical workloads, the ability to monitor and optimize performance will be a key differentiator.
OpenTelemetry’s impact on Go performance is a game-changer for developers building high-performance, observable systems. While it introduces some overhead, the benefits of enhanced visibility and actionable insights far outweigh the costs when implemented thoughtfully. By following best practices like optimized sampling and context propagation, Go developers can harness OpenTelemetry to build faster, more reliable applications.
As the report demonstrates, OpenTelemetry empowers developers to unlock the full potential of their Go applications, ensuring they remain performant in even the most demanding environments. For Go developers looking to stay ahead in the world of observability, embracing OpenTelemetry is a step toward building more robust and efficient systems.
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frog707 · 1 month ago
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Life cycle of an open-source library
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a-fix-of-muses · 2 months ago
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Currently Listening To: "Carousel Spin" by Cascadent, Johnmark Hendrix
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adam-oliveira · 5 months ago
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Defining Design Telemetry
First part of 5 planned videos that proposes a point-of-view for applying Design Telemetry in IBM. It begins with defining a basis for what Design Telemetry is through its function, impact, and intended outcomes, as a quantifiable mechanism for foresight in product futures, and its proven use in industries such as video games.
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epropelledsystems · 2 months ago
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Unlocking Drone Performance: Power, Propulsion & Predictability for Mission-Critical Success
Ensuring the reliability and predictability of drone power, propulsion, range, and data logging remains crucial for their effective operation in mission critical applications.
Efficient Motor Design: Designing and optimizing drone motors for efficiency can contribute to better propulsion and increased flight endurance.
Redundancy Systems: Implementing redundancy systems for power and propulsion components, such as multi energy systems on a drone, can enhance reliability. Systems can be built in hybrid drones, where Starter Generator can be called upon to act as propulsion motor on demand. Building in thermal management systems in motors controller can eliminate failures by actually throttling back performance in thermal runaway system, and bring home the drones with over stressed components in flight.
Advanced Communication Protocols: Utilising advanced communication protocols, such as LTE or 5G, or satellite communications at high frequencies, can extend the range of drones by enabling communication over longer distances. These protocols offer greater reliability and bandwidth.
Signal Boosting Technology: Integrating signal boosting technology, such as directional antennas or signal repeaters, can enhance communication range in areas with poor signal strength. Building in security algorithms, ensures uninterrupted communication between the drone and the ground station, even in challenging environments.
Flight Path Optimisation: Implementing efficient flight path optimization algorithms, by calculating the most efficient route based on factors such as wind conditions and terrain, drones can conserve energy and extend their range.
Data Logging and Predictability: Implementing comprehensive data logging systems onboard drones enables the collection of valuable performance data. This includes information on power consumption, propulsion efficiency.
Real-Time Telemetry: Integrating real-time telemetry systems allows operators to monitor crucial parameters during flight, such as battery voltage, motor RPM, and temperature. This real-time data enables early detection of issues and facilitates timely intervention to prevent failures.
Predictive Maintenance Algorithms: Developing predictive maintenance algorithms based on historical data can anticipate component failures before they occur. By analyzing trends and patterns in data logs, these algorithms can identify potential issues and schedule maintenance proactively, minimizing downtime.
By leveraging ePropelled’s patented technologies and advancements, such as ePConnect™, that has built-in a service engineer on the drone, such communication protocols, and data analysis algorithms, drone operators can optimize performance, increase operational efficiency, and ultimately unlock the full potential of drone technology.
#DroneTechnology #UAVSystems #DronePower #PropulsionInnovation #HybridDrones #Telemetry #PredictiveMaintenance #Drone #MissionCritical #ePConnect #ePropelled #DroneMotors #PropulsionMotor #HybridMotor #drone power systems, #drone propulsion, #hybrid drone motor, #real-time telemetry, #predictive maintenance, #drone communication, #ePConnect, #drone data logging, #UAV efficiency, #mission-critical drones
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jcmarchi · 4 months ago
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Master PTZ Control with BirdDog KBD PTZ Controller - In Stock Now!
New Post has been published on https://thedigitalinsider.com/master-ptz-control-with-birddog-kbd-ptz-controller-in-stock-now/
Master PTZ Control with BirdDog KBD PTZ Controller - In Stock Now!
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On This Weeks Videoguys Live, Join James and Christian to experience the power of the BirdDog KBD Controller! Watch the launch show to explore its advanced PTZ control features. Available now at Videoguys! Order yours today!
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BirdDog KBD Controller
A world-first AI integrated PTZ controller allows you to interact with camera AI functionality directly on the keyboard. Enable AI Auto Tracking, select targets, quickly take over… the power is in your hands. Built with a rugged, ergonomic design, including a hand-rest area and tactile buttons for seamless, extended use.​ View either Multiview, Full screen or Telemetry data in real-time directly on the large, sharp 5” screen.​
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Buttons That Feel Like Buttons Each button has an individual sensor giving a positive action when pressed. No need to take your eyes off the prize.​
One Press Convenience With the press of a single button, change cameras, save or recall presets. It’s almost too convenient!​
An Affordable Innovation Refined through user insight, KBD offers unmatched precision, comfort, and eco-conscious design—all at an accessible price.​
Multiview Built Right In Monitor up to 4 cameras simultaneously via the built-in Multiviewer. Live Tally borders show you what cameras are live on air. Focus in on a single camera for more accurate framing with the touch of a button! ​
Daytime Or Night Owl Both on screen and WebUI sport daytime and night modes for high contrast and low distractions in all production scenarios.​
API Love Easily control camera selection externally via simple RESTful API controls, trigger camera control to follow program outputs from your switcher.​
Integrated Tally Borders Ensure you are always on the mark with live Tally borders, reframe cameras that are not on air with confidence, and fine-tune shots while on air with finesse.​
Super-Fine Control Mode Switch to ‘fine-tune’ mode for 10x joystick sensitivity, perfect for precise, on-air reframing with ease.​
Ultimate Connectivity Supports NDI, VISCA, ONVIF, RS-232, and RS-422, ensuring versatility across workflows.​
KBD Workflow The Centre of your next production. KBD interacts with all cameras* for precise control, embeds directly on your NDI network and can be automated for ulte-integrated productions.​ Never. Miss. A. Shot.​
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KBD + PTZ Cameras Combos and Bundles
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inthewindtunnel · 4 months ago
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Geneva Drive
Telemetry
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ontonix · 7 months ago
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State of Health: Processing Telemetry Data with Artificial Intuition
“Telemetry is the in situ collection of measurements or other data at remote points and their automatic transmission to receiving equipment (telecommunication) for monitoring. The word is derived from the Greek roots tele, ‘far off’, and metron, ‘measure’. Systems that need external instructions and data to operate require the counterpart of telemetry: telecommand.” Wikipedia. The goal of…
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digilogic-system · 9 months ago
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Telemetry Record & Replay System from Digilogic Systems
Digilogic's Telemetry Record Replay System is a new generation high-performance COTS solution based on the PXIe platform.
Our model is capable of recording live Telemetry data at various stages for a period of 2 to 4 hours without user intervention. Also, it is designed to support multiple interface technologies and operation scenarios for Defiance and Aerospace sectors.
For more information (or) to request a quote, Contact us. Phone: Hyderabad: (+91) 40 4547 4601 Bengaluru: (+91) 80 4975 6034 Website: www.digilogicsystems.com Email: [email protected]
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motadata · 11 months ago
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Each software performs and responds differently in dynamic and distributed networks. In fact, as more and more technologies are developing, it is becoming difficult and challenging for businesses to understand the needs and concepts.
Hence, it has become essential to get a better understanding of how the software performs in real-world scenarios and tracks all the advancements made on several products.
There is a clear demand for a simple method for developers to collect data from these different products and share it for monitoring and analysis.
The actionable insights can be later used for making informed decisions. That’s the underlying reason behind the creation of telemetry.
Telemetry is a process that helps organizations and industrial experts collect data from different systems, store it, and analyze it for better performance delivery and informed decision-making.
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market-insider · 1 year ago
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Disposable Lead Wires Market: Analyzing Size, Share, and Growth Patterns
The global disposable lead wires market size is expected to reach USD 1.7 billion by 2030, registering a CAGR of 6.6% from 2023 to 2030, according to a new study by Grand View Research, Inc. Rising incidence of hospital-acquired infections (HAIs) is the key driving factor for the market growth. The reusable lead wires are the major cause of hospital-acquired bloodstream infections. The use of disposable lead wires eliminates the risk of cross-contamination. In addition, it reduces the cost associated with HAIs. The aforementioned benefits are presumed to boost the usage rates over the forecast period.
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As per the data published by the University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics, Madison, more than 77% of cases of contamination with Multidrug-Resistant Bacterial Pathogens (MRSA, Vancomycin-Resistant Enterococci (VRE) were connected with the use of reusable ECG lead wires in hospitalized patients.
Disposable Lead Wires Market Report Highlights
Thermoplastic Elastomer (TPE) is expected to witness lucrative growth during the forecast period, owing to the rising adoption to reduce infection rates in healthcare facilities
The advantages of TPE over other materials like PVC and rubber latex such as providing better flexibility, ease of processing enabling high performance in a variety of applications
The demand for the 5-lead machine type is expected to increase in coming years owing to the surge in demand for cost-effective equipment in critical care settings
Ambulatory care centers are presumed to witness exponential growth throughout the forecast period. This can be attributed to the rising significance of disposable LWs inpatient monitoring
North America accounted for the largest share in the market for disposable lead wires, owing to the rising mortality rates pertaining to heart diseases
The Asia Pacific is anticipated to witness lucrative growth as a result of unmet patient needs, rising healthcare expenditure, and the establishment of major global players is expected to drive segment growth during the forecast period
The key players are involved in strategic alliances to sustain the competition, such as mergers & acquisitions, strategic partnerships, and geographic expansion
For More Details or Sample Copy please visit link @: Disposable Lead Wires Market Report
According to World Health Organization (WHO), 7 out of every 100 hospitalized patients will develop hospital-acquired infections in developed countries, whereas, the number will increase to 10 in developing countries due to poor healthcare infrastructure. The rate of ICU-acquired infections is at least 2-3 times higher in developing countries. Hence, significant demand for these products prevails due to such factors.
Moreover, the rising number of government initiatives to promote the incorporation of patient safety procedures in hospital settings is presumed to drive the overall market growth during the forecast period. Furthermore, an introduction of technologically advanced disposable LWs is anticipated to drive the market growth during the forecast period. For instance, advanced disposable ECG-LWs with patented push-button design have superior capabilities in reducing alarms that are created by a failure of leads and the absence of telemetry. These above-mentioned factors are anticipated to fuel the market growth.
List of Major Companies in the Disposable Lead Wires Market
3M
BD
Mindray
Schiller AG
Carlisle Medical Technologies
OSI Systems, Inc.
CONMED
Hill-Rom Services, Inc.
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mp3monsterme · 1 year ago
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Two weeks of Fluent Bit
The last couple of weeks have been pretty exciting. Firstly, we have Fluent Bit 3.1 released, which brings further feature development to Fluent Bit, making it even more capable with Fluent Bit handling of Open Telemetry (OTel). The full details of the release are available at https://fluentbit.io/announcements/v3.1.0/ Fluent Bit classic to YAML We’ve been progressing the utility, testing and…
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