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That's less than half of Brex's crazy $12.3 billion peak back in 2022.

But honestly, it’s still one of the biggest fintech deals ever and actually gives people real money in a market where most unicorns are just stuck. The founders are reportedly splitting about $1 billion each, early investors (2017-2018) are getting 12-80x returns, and YC’s tiny $120k seed turned into ~$100 million (800x, insane TBH). Even later folks (especially the 2021-2022 crowd) are breaking even (at least) or getting a little upside thanks to some 2024 RSU top-ups.


“Breaking even” on what? The cost to exercise? Or the missed opportunity cost of going somewhere else?

What I mean is that later employees—especially the ones who joined during the 2021–2022 hype when Brex was valued at that crazy $12.3 billion peak—got their RSU grants priced at those very high levels. That meant their equity was basically "underwater" once valuations crashed post-2022; the shares they were promised wouldn’t pay out much (or anything meaningful) unless the company somehow got back to those crazy heights.

To keep people from jumping ship and to make things feel fairer, IIRC in 2024 Brex did some RSU "top-ups" - basically, they handed out extra shares at the much lower current valuation to compensate for the drop and give those folks a better shot at actually making some real money or "breaking even".


I used to play a game called Pro-Am on Nintendo. This game reminds me so much of that. The controls are basically the same.


Pro-Am was amazing. Didn't like the sequel.

The Unbeatable Car in the first game was kinda frustrating!


Yes! You bought back fond memories, despite the frustrations.


What sorts of assumptions?


I user the ycombinator link, but it still says 0 credits, what gives?


> Building nôn pipelines

Never heard of "nôn pipelines" - is that like a new thing?


> She gets credit for being complicit in a violent overthrow of the Democratic government of the united States.

Care to elaborate what is this in reference to? Especially the "violent" part. Please do not simply link to some news article in your response.


https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45517188

Maybe later I'll compile a list of videos but at the moment I ask you to do a little research yourself. I gotta work.


While there is pingora https://blog.cloudflare.com/how-we-built-pingora-the-proxy-t..., I would recommend checking out envoy. Although not rust based, envoy has gained quite the repute for being extremely versatile and robust.


There's a handful but not mature IMO: https://github.com/sadoyan/aralez https://github.com/junkurihara/rust-rpxy

I'm interested in the space, but until they have automatic certificate management and middleware for managing DNS records in Cloudflare (for example), then I'm reluctant to switch over.


Thanks, I'm looking specifically for a Rust based one, as I know there are lots of proxies in other languages but few in Rust, and I'm just curious if anyone has suggestions on that.


Basic question: Is PF related to ebpf by any chance?


no, but b in bpf stands for Berkeley, so the interface originated from bsd.

bpf is a virtual machine to process network packets in kernel space. So it is sort of like the low level assembly language of network processing. It is entirely possible to build a high-level packet filtering language that compiles down to bpf, But I don't think PF does this. PF appears to use it's own specific network processing interface.

https://man.openbsd.org/pf

Note the pf specific ioctls used to inject rules into the kernel.


PF stands for packet filter in both cases


I have seen Nextdoor also do the same and I had alway wondered. I believe it uses the same mechanism. Quite interesting.


I use ngrok for exactly this type of functionality. Can someone clarify why would anyone need malai over ngrok?


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