Go from Data Warehouse to Data and AI platform with BigQuery
Build, train, and run ML models with simple SQL. Automate data prep, analysis, and predictions with built-in AI assistance from Gemini.
BigQuery is more than a data warehouse—it's an autonomous data-to-AI platform. Use familiar SQL to train ML models, run time-series forecasts, and generate AI-powered insights with native Gemini integration. Built-in agents handle data engineering and data science workflows automatically. Get $300 in free credit, query 1 TB, and store 10 GB free monthly.
Try BigQuery Free
Easily Host LLMs and Web Apps on Cloud Run
Run everything from popular models with on-demand NVIDIA L4 GPUs to web apps without infrastructure management.
Run frontend and backend services, batch jobs, host LLMs, and queue processing workloads without the need to manage infrastructure. Cloud Run gives you on-demand GPU access for hosting LLMs and running real-time AI—with 5-second cold starts and automatic scale-to-zero so you only pay for actual usage. New customers get $300 in free credit to start.
Run linters against staged git files and don't let anything slip into your code base! Linting makes more sense when run before committing your code. By doing so you can ensure no errors go into the repository and enforce code style. But running a lint process on a whole project is slow, and linting results can be irrelevant. Ultimately you only want to lint files that will be committed. This project contains a script that will run arbitrary shell tasks with a list of staged files as an...
esprint (pronounced E-S-sprint) speeds up eslint by running the linting engine across multiple threads. esprint sets up a server daemon to cache the lint status of each file in memory. It uses a watcher to determine when files change, to only lint files as necessary. It also has a CI mode where it does not set up a daemon and just lints in parallel. In order to use esprint, first place an .esprintrc file in the root directory your project. This is similar to a .flowconfig if you use flow...