Thursday - How Turbopuffer scales to 100B vectors


On Tuesday, Nathan VanBenschoten of Turbopuffer will share how to they scaled to 100B scale vector search in object storage.

If you don't know Turbopuffer, it's probably the fastest growing vector db / search engine in the last year. Used by Notion, Cursor, Anthropic for vector retrieval.

They particularly thrive in high-scale scenarios relative to the cost. In this talk Nathan shares their journey how they scaled up to 100B while keeping latency and cost reasonable.

Signup here - https://maven.com/p/2283c7/searching-100-billion-vectors-in-object-storage

-Doug

Events · Consulting · Training (use code search-tips)

You're subscribed to Doug Turnbull's daily search tips where I share tips, blog articles, events, and more. You can always manage your profile:

Doug Turnbull

I share search tips, blog articles, and free events I'm hosting about the search+retreval industry, vector databases, information retrieval and more.

Read more from Doug Turnbull

Just sharing my post on Bayesian BM25 and other ways of normalizing BM25 scores. Enjoy! https://softwaredoug.com/blog/2026/03/06/probabilistic-bm25-utopia Do you have any thoughts on normalizing BM25 scores? -Doug Events · Consulting · Training (use code search-tips) You're subscribed to Doug Turnbull's daily search tips where I share tips, blog articles, events, and more. You can always manage your profile:

Its convenient to have a lexical score normalized from 0-1. Sadly BM25 scores tend to be all over the place (0.5? 5.1? 12.51?). Fine for ranking. Annoying for other goals. That's why I wrote a post about one way to compute probabilities from BM25. In that post, I allude to one hack that forces BM25 to 0-1. Let's walk through it. A query term’s BM25 score is IDF * TF. Lucene’s TF is already normalized Lucene drops the (k1 + 1) in the numerator of BM25, giving you: Now we’ve got a TF term...

Reviewing Bayesian BM25 - a new approach to creating calibrated BM25 probabilities for hybrid search. I talk about this vs naive approaches I've used to do similar things. Enjoy! https://softwaredoug.com/blog/2026/03/06/probabilistic-bm25-utopia -Doug Events · Consulting · Training (use code search-tips) You're subscribed to Doug Turnbull's daily search tips where I share tips, blog articles, events, and more. You can always manage your profile: