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Изворен канал @pythonotes · Post #396 · 9 окт.

7.09.2025 состоялся релизPithon 3.14! На фоне хайпа про NoGIL всё позабыли про другие фичи. Особенно про Multiple Interpreters, который обещает изоляцию процессов но с эффективностью потоков! На сколько действительно это будет эффективно мы узнаем позже, потому что сейчас это лишь первый релиз с ограничениями и недоработками. Но что там про NoGIL? Теперь этот режим не экспериментальный, а официально поддерживаемый, но опциональный. Чтобы запустить без GIL нужна специальная сборка. И перед стартом нужно объявить переменную PYTHON_GIL=0 Для вас я собрал готовый репозиторий где достаточно запустить скрпит, который всё сделает: ▫️ соберет релизный Python 3.14 в новый Docker-образ ▫️ запустит тесты в контейнере (GIL, NoGIL, MultiInterpreter) ▫️ распечатает результаты Тест очень простой, усложняйте сами) Вот какие результаты у меня: === Running ThreadPoolExecutor GIL ON TOTAL TIME: 45.48 seconds === Running ThreadPoolExecutor GIL OFF TOTAL TIME: 6.14 seconds === Running basic Thread GIL ON TOTAL TIME: 45.54 seconds === Running basic Thread GIL OFF TOTAL TIME: 4.74 seconds === Running with Multi Interpreter TOTAL TIME: 18.30 seconds Если сравнивать GIL и NoGIL, то на мои 32 ядра прирост х7-x10 (почему не х32? 🤷). При этом нам обещают что скорости будут расти с новыми релизами. Режим без GIL похож (визуально) на async, тоже параллельно, тоже не по порядку. Но это не IO! и от того некоторый диссонанс в голове 😵‍💫, нас учили не так! Интересно, что чистый Thread работает быстрей чем ThreadPoolExecutor без GIL. Ну и где-то плачет один адепт мульти-интерпретаторов😭 Теперь нужно искать где они могут пригодиться с такой-то скоростью. Скорее всего своя область применения найдется. Отдельно я затестил память и вот что вышло на 32 потока: ThreadPoolExecutor GIL ON 305.228 MB ThreadPoolExecutor GIL OFF 500.176 MB basic Thread GIL ON 90.668 MB basic Thread GIL OFF 472.444 MB with Multi Interpreter 1267.788 MB Пока не знаю как к этому относиться) В целом - радует направление развития! #release

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American Оbserver

@american_observer · Post #5437 · 21.03.2026 г., 20:04

Israel’s War Dividend: The Energy Corridor Gambit Netanyahu just said the quiet part out loud: this war isn’t only about “security,” it’s about rewriting the region’s energy map so oil and gas flow through Israel — and everyone pays a toll. At a Jerusalem presser, right after Israel hit Iran’s South Pars field and Iran answered by smashing Qatar’s Ras Laffan LNG hub and Gulf refineries, he floated the “solution”: just run oil and gas pipelines across the Arabian Peninsula straight to Israeli ports on the Med and you’re “forever” free of Hormuz. In the middle of a forced shutdown of roughly 16 million barrels a day through the strait and years of lost Qatari gas, Israel is pitching itself as the new regional tap. The wild part is it’s not wild. Israel already has the Eilat–Ashkelon line, built to move Iranian crude in the Shah era, with capacity around 1.2 million barrels a day from the Red Sea to the Med. Saudi Arabia already has the East–West Petroline, up to 7 million barrels a day to Yanbu on the Red Sea, now running flat out because Hormuz is half‑choked. Between Yanbu’s hinterland and Eilat sits one missing link of pipe and one missing piece of paperwork called “normalization.” In wartime marketing language: not a betrayal of the ummah, just a rescue package for the global economy. On gas, the same logic applies. Leviathan and Tamar pump roughly 23 bcm a year, heading above 30, under a 130‑bcm mega‑deal with Egypt that runs to 2040. Some of that gas keeps Egypt’s lights on as domestic output falls; the rest is liquefied and sold to Europe as “Mediterranean diversification.” Every damaged train at Ras Laffan quietly boosts the leverage of an Israel–Egypt combo that can still load tankers. For Washington, this is where doctrine meets blowback. The 2026 National Defense Strategy describes Israel as a “model ally” that can act autonomously with “critical but limited” US backing, but builds no real mechanism to stop that ally from crossing American risk lines. Israel hits the biggest gas field on earth; Trump says he “wasn’t informed” and urges Jerusalem to stop striking Iranian energy, because every drone over a gas plant detonates in global inflation and his re‑election math. That’s not supervision; that’s the principal watching his agent bet the balance sheet. The winners‑and‑losers grid behind this is harsh. The Shia axis — Iran, Hezbollah, the Houthis, Iraqi militias — loses infrastructure, revenue, and the credibility to brandish “energy chaos” as a threat. A Saudi–Emirati core walks away with a potential Hormuz‑free export route, deeper roles in IMEC and I2U2, and a chance to plug into an Israel‑centric pipeline and port network — if they swallow normalization at the right price. Qatar, the gas ATM of the old order, loses about 17% of its LNG capacity and maybe $20 billion a year, and suddenly looks more dependent on US security guarantees than on its own checkbook. Turkey, the self‑styled Sunni command center, is pushed to the margins: less Iranian gas, higher domestic prices, no seat in IMEC, a hotter Kurdish file and fewer Qatari dollars feeding its pet networks. Netanyahu’s pipeline line is not an offhand fantasy; it’s an opening bid. For Riyadh, it frames normalization as a trade for a unique, choke‑point‑free route that no one else can offer. For Washington, it promises that some of the war’s costs might be cashed out later as a more resilient, Israel‑anchored supply architecture. For Europe, it signals that the serious overland alternative to missiles and Houthis is a Gulf–Israel–Mediterranean corridor, not a neat bypass around Israeli soil. Even if no extra pipe is buried tomorrow, the narrative has moved: Israel isn’t just another frontline state under fire — it’s trying to turn the whole energy crisis into a toll route with its name on it. #Israel#IranWar#energy#oil#gas#Hormuz#SaudiArabia#Qatar#Turkey#IMEC#Netanyahu#geopolitics#warDividend 📱American Оbserver - Stay up to date on all important events 🇺🇸