New to Google Cloud? Get $300 in credits to explore Compute Engine, BigQuery, Cloud Run, Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform, and more.
Start your next project with $300 in free Google Cloud credit. Spin up VMs, run containers, query petabytes in BigQuery, or build agents with Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform. Once your credits are used, keep building with 20+ always-free tier products including Compute Engine, Cloud Storage, GKE, and Cloud Run functions. No commitment required—just sign up and start building.
Claim $300 Free
Build Agents and Models on One Platform
Everything you need to build production-ready agents and models. Access 200+ Google and third-party AI models and tools.
Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform is Google Cloud's comprehensive platform for developers to build, scale, govern, and optimize agents and models. Choose from Google's most advanced models and third-party models like Anthropic's Claude Model Family.
Extract internal monitoring data from application logs
Extract internal monitoring data from application logs for collection in a time-series database. mtail is a tool for extracting metrics from application logs to be exported into a timeseries database or timeseries calculator for alerting and dashboarding. It fills a monitoring niche by being the glue between applications that do not export their own internal state (other than via logs) and existing monitoring systems, such that system operators do not need to patch those applications to...
gopsutil tag policy is almost same as Semantic Versioning but automatically increases like Ubuntu versioning. gopsutil aims to keep backward compatibility until a major version change. Tagged at the end of the month, but if there are only a few commits, it can be skipped. All works are implemented without cgo by porting C structs to golang structs.
Set app volumes with real sliders! Arduino project to build hardware
...The sliders are connected to 5 (or as many as you like) analog pins on an Arduino Nano/Uno board. They're powered from the board's 5V output (see schematic). The board connects via a USB cable to the PC. The code running on the Arduino board is a C program constantly writing current slider values over its serial interface. The PC runs a lightweight Go client in the background. This client reads the serial stream and adjusts app volumes according to the given configuration file.