
According to the documents protocol buffers seems to care much about performance.īoost seems somewhat more lightweight in the sense that you don't have an external language for specifying the data format which I find quite convenient for this particular project. I've been looking a bit at protocol buffers and rialize. I'm worried that text/xml-based ways of doing it is too slow and I really don't want to write this myself since problems like string encoding and number endianess can make it way more complicated than it looks on the surface. The data vectors can often be many megabytes large. I'm not interested in serializing complex class hierarchies, but more of sending structures with a few simple members such as number, strings and data vectors. Sometimes fast nickels are better than slow dimes.I'm building a distributed C++ application that needs to do lots of serialization and deserialization of simple data structures that's being passed between different processes and computers. Two and a half years later, that space is still vacant and the shopping center has lost five more tenants. Not because of Covid or declining sales, but because the shopping center raised the restaurant's rent too high for them to operate profitably. My favorite Chinese restaurant closed down in May of 2020. I intended on emailing my feedback to Evernote, but there is no easily obtained general customer service email address so I posted here in case Evernote cares about feedback from their customers. I will most likely be downgrading to free next year when my subscription ends.

I don't get $70 a year utility from my subscription.

It turns out that the $35 a year plan no longer exists and the lowest cost paid plan is $70. Of course I procrastinated and I was one day past my renewal date when I went to downgrade. I really didn't get any benefit from the upgraded plan so I decided to go back to my $35 a year plan. I got an email saying I could upgrade for cheap price. I had a $35 a year plan (don't remember what it was called).
