blazingmq
Tabby
blazingmq | Tabby | |
---|---|---|
13 | 91 | |
2,471 | 55,387 | |
0.8% | - | |
9.2 | 9.3 | |
8 days ago | 20 days ago | |
C++ | TypeScript | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
blazingmq
- BlazingMQ - High performant Open Source Message Queue by Bloomberg
- FLaNK Stack Weekly for 24 July 2023
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A Modern High-Performance Open Source Message Queuing System
Sounds great, and you have lots of nice documentation on the page, but could you provide a TLDR? There's a lot of competition in this area: GRPC, Cap'n'proto (was posted on HN a day or two ago), NATS, etc.
I'm also having trouble figuring out if Mats3 is a library (with a JMS API) over a variety of messaging systems (WebSockets, NATS, etc.)?
P.S. Some diagrams like https://bloomberg.github.io/blazingmq/ would be very helpful, especially at https://mats3.io/background/what-is-mats/. If a picture's worth a thousand words, and an animation must be worth at least 10k words. :)
- BlazingMQ: High-performance open source message queuing system
- A modern high-performance open source message queuing system
Tabby
- Ask HN: Alternative to Putty for Multiple Sites?
- Just How Much Faster Are the Gnome 46 Terminals?
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🚀 Unleashing the Power of Cloud Magic: Transforming a Lone AWS EC2 Instance into a K8s Powerhouse! 🌐🔥
I would be using Tabby Terminal.
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what terminal emulator do you use and why?
tabby.sh - design, features
- FLaNK Stack Weekly for 24 July 2023
- FLaNK Stack Weekly for 10 July 2023
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Tabby: A terminal for a more modern age
iTerm2 is a great terminal for macOS. I use it extensively every day. Despite that, I would gladly try out other terminals because it's fun and because I'm always open to finding something superior to even the great tools I use.
That said, there is exactly 1 feature that seems to only exist in iTerm2, and until another terminal emulator appears that has it, I'm staying put: tmux control mode.
https://github.com/Eugeny/tabby/issues/2715
- Windows admins - What SSH client do you prefer?
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What kind of applications are missing from the Linux ecosystem?
I've found Tabby does a good job and is Cross-Platform to you can use on Windows too. It can run any installed shell, serial connections and ssh. You can create profiles. It needs some work to be fully functional in Wayland i.e. Autohide feature doesn't work. But that's a graphical issue. Though, if you're just after creating and organising SSH profiles not terminal emulation, Remmina already has you covered. SSH, RDP and VNC.
What are some alternatives?
ZeroMQ - ZeroMQ core engine in C++, implements ZMTP/3.1
Windows Terminal - The new Windows Terminal and the original Windows console host, all in the same place!
BDE - Basic Development Environment - a set of foundational C++ libraries used at Bloomberg.
hyperterm - A terminal built on web technologies
mosquitto - Eclipse Mosquitto - An open source MQTT broker
oh-my-posh - The most customisable and low-latency cross platform/shell prompt renderer
kafka-in-production - :books: Tech blogs & talks by companies that run Kafka in production
cmder - Lovely console emulator package for Windows
mats3 - Mats3: Message-based Asynchronous Transactional Staged Stateless Services
Visual Studio Code - Visual Studio Code
anime.js - JavaScript animation engine
terminator - multiple GNOME terminals in one window