H100's can be $2 and hour, so $192 an hour for the full cluster. They report 22k tokens per second, so ~ 80 million an hour, thats $16 an hour at $0.2 per million. Maybe a bit more for input tokens, but it seems a long way off.
I think you mis-read. Thats 22k tokens per second per node, so per 8 h100's. With 12 nodes they get 264k tokens per second, or 950 million an hour. This get's you to roughly $0.2021 per million at $2 an hour.
What is obnoxious is that certificate transparency logs mean that you now have to effectively centrally register any new domain you put online. That means you instantly see a whole load of traffic to your domain from bots, scrapers, beg bounty scanners etc. Any new site has to be designed to handle that baseline of traffic.
I understand the point of CTL's and it's necessary given that every browser and device is configured to trust CA's that you wouldn't actually trust. It's had awful side effects for people who want to host low traffic sites, or fly under the radar for whatever reason.
Two problem with offering usage limits is the real limit you could offer if all users hit it, is low. The users with usage far below the limits feel they are getting a bad deal, compared to if they can't see the limits and they don't hit them, they feel they have "unlimited!".
Are they going to be able to maintain the volunteer team who curate the catalogue? Currently a fair amount of work goes into making sure that hosted packages do not contain malware and also add value in that they don't replicate the features of existing packages. This workload has increased recently with AI generated submissions.
TSC co-chair here - one of my fellow co-chairs (Mika Epstein, aka Ipstenu) was the lead of the plugin review team for a long time, and several other contributors have been very involved in the plugin review processes, so definitely something that’s top of mind for us.
From their statement "Our engineering teams have been working on and testing a fix for number of weeks". Can you image if a database was knowingly left unsecured for that long with data that sensitive and seemingly without telling anyone. It will be interesting to see how the ICO deal with this.
I've been using sway daily since before it was really stable and recently tried Niri but maybe couldn't get over the muscle memory from sway. I use sway mostly in tabbed mode anyway which gives a similar feel to a scrolling WM but with flexibility to break out to tiles in a different workspace if needed.
What has massively improved my workflow recently is vertical tabs in Firefox. I now have browser tabs I can cycle up and down through on side of my screen, and application tabs I can cycle through left and right at the top. I love it.