I've used WebAssembly for complex cross platform SDKs. I write the core SDK once in WebAssembly and then wrap it with an API layer for each SDK. It sure beats updating and testing complex logic for 30 different SDKs.
Is MapLibre GL a cheaper (free?) open source alternative?
Cool stuff btw. I’m trying to visualize weather model data myself (millions of points) at https://futureradar.net and have been researching client-side techniques like yours.
Our company at the time forced us to use Bing as the default search engine, so people started searching “google” on Bing to just to get back to Google. We were told “they’re both search engines, just use this one”, just like a person who bought an iPhone from a dollar store.
If you want to be extremely resilient with your infrastructure, you should be multi-cloud anyway. So you can rely on US infra like AWS and also something like Hetzner. Then you're still good if the US stuff goes crazy.
Fwiw, after spending a few minutes on your website, I see nothing that indicates your software works on Google Drive or Photos. It just looks like a Backblaze alternative. There might be some room to showcase your offering a bit more.
I am a Backblaze customer so I will definitely consider your software as an alternative.
I haven't seen entrepreneurship generally be looked upon favorably in the corporate world. It's often a red flag that you'll get bored in a niche role or be difficult to manage. At least for technical ICs.
As I understand it, even a low 6-figure exit is a huge plus for you in the entrepreneurial world. It should be a lift for you in the eyes of people like founders and investors.
Good question. Corviont is region-focused (you package one region), not "host the whole planet". Hundreds of GB is usually the full planet at high zoom / lots of layers.
Also it’s not one giant tile DB - there are 3 datasets:
That's ok for enterprise stuff where revenue per user is high. I'd hate to lose a 5/6 figure deal because I have to spend time rolling out some sort of enterprise auth solution for a client.
Sounds like you could target a small niche that is currently using a broader more generic product.
I'm always surprised by things like the fact there are several software solutions for managing gyms, but there are also specific solutions for rock climbing gyms, yoga studios, etc. I know a guy who builds rock climbing gym software and he's got a team of 20+ employees.
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