diff --git a/_pages/about.md b/_pages/about.md
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@@ -10,5 +10,3 @@ Best ways to get in contact:
- Email: [bradlee@speice.io](mailto:bradlee@speice.io)
- LinkedIn: [bradleespeice](https://www.linkedin.com/in/bradleespeice/)
-- Matrix (Chat): [@bspeice:matrix.com](https://matrix.to/#/@bspeice:matrix.com)
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diff --git a/_posts/2019-09-01-binary-shootout-part-0.md b/_posts/2019-09-01-binary-shootout-part-0.md
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+---
+layout: post
+title: "Binary Format Shootout - Prologue: Nom"
+description: "Making sense of binary streams"
+category:
+tags: [rust, binary-shootout]
+---
+
+I've been interested in using a binary protocol library for personal projects recently,
+and found myself with a strong case of decision paralysis. Do I use
+[Cap'n Proto](https://capnproto.org/), which has supported Rust the longest?
+[Flatbuffers](https://google.github.io/flatbuffers) recently added support,
+or I could take a look at [SBE](https://github.com/real-logic/simple-binary-encoding).
+Or what about building something myself? A lot of these seem unnecessarily
+complicated, when my personal use case is just providing views on top of
+buffers with a relatively simple structure.
+
+Even in my personal projects, I want the choices to be the best possible;
+I hate the feeling of looking back at anything I've built and saying "I regret
+that decision and I could have done better." So after agonizing over the choice
+of protocol library for too long, I decided it would be worth building a test
+to get a feel for each. It would give me a way to build a proof-of-concept
+and become familiar with how each library worked, what the performance
+characteristics were of each, and evaluate whether it was worth putting
+in the effort of building yet another binary protocol library myself.
+
+To that end, this is the summation of research into the binary protocol
+systems that currently support Rust. The goal isn't to recommend "the best,"
+but to understand each well enough to make an informed decision.
+
+My use case is as follows: ingest binary market data from
+[IEX](https://iextrading.com/trading/market-data/) and turn it into
+a format understandable by each library being tested. We'll later
+write a simple program to analyze the data.
+
+Note: Market data is the use case here
+simply because IEX makes the data freely available; no code or analysis
+in this blog is related to my past or present work.
+
+But before we can run any analysis, we need to read in the files
+supplied by IEX. To do that, we'll use a library in Rust
+called [`nom`](https://docs.rs/nom/5.0.1/nom/).
+
+# Ingesting Market Data
diff --git a/_posts/2019-09-01-binary-shootout-part-1.md b/_posts/2019-09-01-binary-shootout-part-1.md
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+---
+layout: post
+title: "new post"
+description: ""
+category:
+tags: []
+---
+
+# Designing the Test
+
+My use case is as follows: ingest binary market data from
+[IEX](https://iextrading.com/trading/market-data/) and turn it into
+a format understandable by each library being tested. Then we'll
+write a simple program to find total trade volume per ticker,
+and the highest and lowest bid/ask price per ticker as well.
+
+Note: Market data is the use case here
+simply because IEX makes the data freely available; no code or analysis
+in this blog is related to my past or present work.
+
+Now, the basic criteria used to evaluate each library:
+
+1) The library must have cross-language support, and treat Rust as a
+first-class citizen.
+
+2) The schema must be able to evolve and add new fields. The information
+I'm gathering now is fairly simple, but would evolve in the future.
+
+3) Performance is a priority; material performance differences
+(time to de/serialize, memory usage) matter.
+
+Under those three criteria, we're excluding a lot of systems that
+may make sense in other contexts:
+
+- [Bincode](https://github.com/servo/bincode) has great Rust support
+and a simple wire format (message structure) but isn't usable from
+other languages and doesn't deal well with schema evolution.
+
+- [Protocol Buffers](https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/) have
+great cross-language support, but material performance issues compared
+to other systems like FlatBuffers.
+
+- JSON/Msgpack are schema-less; while the wire format is simple,
+having code generated from a schema is too nice to pass up.
+
+While each of these have a niche they perform well in, they're not
+suited for the system under consideration.
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