---
title: "How SF Compute is selling supercomputers while using Resend"
description: "I really like that Resend is a simple product, where the features they have are the ones I actually want to use."
slogan: "We make supercomputers."
name: The San Francisco Compute Company
slug: sfcompute
logo: /static/customers/sfcompute-logo.svg
website: sfcompute.com
founded: San Francisco, 2023
using_since: August, 2023
authors:
  - name: Evan Conrad
    title: Founder
    avatar: /static/avatars/evan-conrad.jpg
og_image: /static/customers/sfcompute-og.jpg
updated_at: "2024-11-28"
---

Resend excels in being a product that **does one thing well**: sending emails.

There's **no unnecessary complexity**, no bloated features we don't need. Every feature added is one we actually use. As a business, we want to pay for a service that **sends emails reliably**, and Resend delivers exactly that.

**People expect emails when things happen**. When orders are filled, we send them emails to let them know; it lets them know they have compute. **If those emails didn't reach them**, they'd be sad and think they have compute when they don't.

Integrating with Resend was **straightforward** and filled with **delightful little experiences**.

Initially, we were only missing the ability to **send scheduled emails**. At first, we had to build this ourselves, and I wrote some hideous thing in Postgres that would let us do it. **About a week later**, the Resend team shipped what we wanted: [the ability to schedule emails](/blog/introducing-the-schedule-email-api). We removed our hideous, buggy code and started using Resend's scheduler feature. **It was great!**

If I had to describe Resend in one sentence, I'd say it's **the only good email API**.