high_scalability high_scalability-2007 high_scalability-2007-22 knowledge-graph by maker-knowledge-mining

22 high scalability-2007-07-23-Weblink Template


meta infos for this blog

Source: html

Introduction: Information Sources Platform What's Inside? The Stats Lessons Learned To discuss this article please visit the forums at


Summary: the most important sentenses genereted by tfidf model

sentIndex sentText sentNum sentScore


similar blogs computed by tfidf model

tfidf for this blog:

wordName wordTfidf (topN-words)

[('forums', 0.625), ('discuss', 0.432), ('visit', 0.401), ('inside', 0.344), ('please', 0.279), ('article', 0.256)]

similar blogs list:

simIndex simValue blogId blogTitle

same-blog 1 1.0 22 high scalability-2007-07-23-Weblink Template

Introduction: Information Sources Platform What's Inside? The Stats Lessons Learned To discuss this article please visit the forums at

2 0.2553187 222 high scalability-2008-01-25-Application Database and DAL Architecture

Introduction: Hi gurus, I'm totally new to this high scalability thing. I'm trying to create a website with scalability in mind (personal project). In my application I'll have forums for different groups of people (each group will have their own forums, members of groups can still post in other groups' forums but each group will mainly be using their forums most of the time). Now, I'm going to start with about 2000 groups with the potential of reaching up to 10000 groups (this is the maximum due to the nature of my application). I was thinking that having all posts in one table will be way too much for one table (esp. that some groups are expected to post hundreds or even thousands times per day, let's say about 500 of the groups, the rest of the groups won't be that active though) as I'll have to index the PostID, ParentPostID, GroupID and PostDate which can produce large indexes (consequentially causing slow inserts) if having everything in one table. So, I'm thinking of a way to divide the posts

3 0.20552124 239 high scalability-2008-02-04-Streaming Video on Amazon EC2?

Introduction: An Amazon EC2 Flash Video Streaming solution has been announced by Wowza Media. What do you think about the future of similar solutions? Is Amazon EC2 and S3 ready for video streaming? I have found threads on their forums related to the performance, scalability and high availability of the hosted streaming solution. How would you make it scalable? Is it really cheaper than traditional hosting? Looking forward to your thoughts!

4 0.17602141 132 high scalability-2007-10-25-Who can answer or analyze the image store and visit solution about alibaba.com?Thanks

Introduction: Who can answer or analyze the image store and visit solution about alibaba.com?Thanks

5 0.12358823 590 high scalability-2009-05-06-Art of Distributed

Introduction: Art of Distributed Part 1: Rethinking about distributed computing models I ‘m getting a lot of questions lately about the distributed computing, especially distributed computing model, and MapReduce, such as: What is MapReduce? Can MapReduce fit in all situations? How we can compares it with other technologies such as Grid Computing? And what is the best solution to our situation? So I decide to write about the distributed computing article in two parts. First one about the distributed computing model and what is the difference between them. In the second part I will discuss the reliability, and distributed storage systems. Download the article in PDF format. Download the article in MS Word format. I wait for your comments, and questions, and I will answer it in part two.

6 0.11339395 923 high scalability-2010-10-21-Machine VM + Cloud API - Rewriting the Cloud from Scratch

7 0.10215225 656 high scalability-2009-07-16-Scalable Web Architectures and Application State

8 0.10123654 1281 high scalability-2012-07-11-FictionPress: Publishing 6 Million Works of Fiction on the Web

9 0.098758027 523 high scalability-2009-02-25-Relating business, systems & technology during turbulent time -By John Zachman

10 0.086883888 720 high scalability-2009-10-12-High Performance at Massive Scale – Lessons learned at Facebook

11 0.08453688 108 high scalability-2007-10-03-Paper: Brewer's Conjecture and the Feasibility of Consistent Available Partition-Tolerant Web Services

12 0.080475144 70 high scalability-2007-08-22-How many machines do you need to run your site?

13 0.07843852 1043 high scalability-2011-05-17-Sponsored Post: Animoto, deviantART, Hadapt, Clustrix, Percona, Mathworks, AppDynamics, ScaleOut, Cloudkick, Membase, CloudSigma, ManageEngine, Site24x7

14 0.078423731 762 high scalability-2010-01-18-The Missing Piece in the Virtualization Stack (Part 1)

15 0.077026412 1073 high scalability-2011-07-05-Sponsored Post: TripAdvisor, eHarmony, NoSQL Now!, Surge, BioWare, Tungsten, deviantART, Aconex, Hadapt, Mathworks, AppDynamics, ScaleOut, Membase, CloudSigma, ManageEngine, Site24x7

16 0.075767145 1079 high scalability-2011-07-12-Sponsored Post: New Relic, eHarmony, TripAdvisor, NoSQL Now!, Surge, BioWare, Tungsten, deviantART, Aconex, Hadapt, Mathworks, AppDynamics, ScaleOut, Membase, CloudSigma, ManageEngine, Site24x7

17 0.075708255 287 high scalability-2008-03-24-Advertise

18 0.072481185 928 high scalability-2010-10-26-Scaling DISQUS to 75 Million Comments and 17,000 RPS

19 0.072081417 703 high scalability-2009-09-12-How Google Taught Me to Cache and Cash-In

20 0.071422637 1050 high scalability-2011-05-31-Sponsored Post: Animoto, deviantART, Hadapt, Clustrix, Percona, Mathworks, AppDynamics, ScaleOut, Cloudkick, Membase, CloudSigma, ManageEngine, Site24x7


similar blogs computed by lsi model

lsi for this blog:

topicId topicWeight

[(0, 0.043), (1, -0.028), (2, 0.031), (3, -0.01), (4, -0.012), (5, 0.012), (6, -0.034), (7, -0.008), (8, -0.012), (9, 0.021), (10, -0.026), (11, -0.016), (12, -0.024), (13, -0.032), (14, -0.026), (15, 0.018), (16, -0.02), (17, -0.033), (18, -0.001), (19, 0.011), (20, 0.004), (21, -0.03), (22, -0.014), (23, 0.006), (24, 0.006), (25, -0.028), (26, 0.067), (27, -0.048), (28, -0.021), (29, 0.006), (30, -0.026), (31, 0.005), (32, 0.009), (33, 0.13), (34, -0.012), (35, -0.003), (36, 0.081), (37, 0.014), (38, 0.029), (39, 0.004), (40, 0.002), (41, 0.03), (42, -0.027), (43, 0.037), (44, 0.024), (45, -0.017), (46, 0.028), (47, 0.01), (48, 0.017), (49, -0.024)]

similar blogs list:

simIndex simValue blogId blogTitle

same-blog 1 0.98697603 22 high scalability-2007-07-23-Weblink Template

Introduction: Information Sources Platform What's Inside? The Stats Lessons Learned To discuss this article please visit the forums at

2 0.5504775 520 high scalability-2009-02-25-Advanced BPM program in USA and India discount for Group Membership

Introduction: One day, Advanced BPM Certified program led by Global Leader, Steve Towers. Latest Case Studies and innovations - hands-on, practical. Event locations USA San Francisco 16 Mar 09 Atlanta 17 Mar 09 New York 19 Mar 09 Chicago 20 Mar 09 www.BESTBPMTRAINING.COM India Mumbai 23 Mar 09 Bangalore 24 Mar 09 Hyderabad 26 Mar 09 Delhi 27 Mar 09 www.BPMTRAININGNOW.COM For more information please visit For registrations, group discounts or further details please contact Caroline.smith@icmgworld.com

3 0.54816836 678 high scalability-2009-08-09-Writing about cisco loadbalancer?

Introduction: Guys, At one of my jobs I have to administer a CISCO ACE (application control engine) hardware load-balancer. I don't particularly love this beast, but it's very very powerful. There appears to be little real-world info out there, so it could be interesting writing an article on that. But I don't have other HW LB's to compare it to and I don't want to rehash the product page. What would interest you in a 'product review' of a loadbalancer? No replies means it's not an interesting topic, so no article then ;-)

4 0.5354473 494 high scalability-2009-01-16-Reducing Your Website's Bandwidth Usage - how to

Introduction: In this article Jeff Atwood (a rockstar programmer and one of StackOverflow website founders) discusses the measures of how you can reduce you bandwidth usage and refers specifically on high trafficked websites for which bandwidth is more costly than for an average website. This is his experience and you can read more on his post on CodingHorror.com .

5 0.53508431 1653 high scalability-2014-05-23-Gone Fishin' 2014

Introduction: Well, not exactly Fishin', but I'll be on a month long vacation starting today. I won't be posting new content, so we'll all have a break. Disappointing, I know. If you've ever wanted to write an article for HighScalability this would be a great time :-) I'd be very interested in your experiences with containers vs VMs if you have some thoughts on the subject. So if the spirit moves you, please write something. See you on down the road...

6 0.53169024 132 high scalability-2007-10-25-Who can answer or analyze the image store and visit solution about alibaba.com?Thanks

7 0.49764293 656 high scalability-2009-07-16-Scalable Web Architectures and Application State

8 0.4725816 1350 high scalability-2012-10-29-Gone Fishin' Two

9 0.47201592 1128 high scalability-2011-09-30-Gone Fishin'

10 0.46700057 612 high scalability-2009-05-31-Parallel Programming for real-world

11 0.46647307 186 high scalability-2007-12-13-un-article: the setup behind microsoft.com

12 0.45866397 479 high scalability-2008-12-29-Platform virtualization - top 25 providers (software, hardware, combined)

13 0.4375869 226 high scalability-2008-01-28-DR-BC for web-DB servers

14 0.43713114 590 high scalability-2009-05-06-Art of Distributed

15 0.41929474 1073 high scalability-2011-07-05-Sponsored Post: TripAdvisor, eHarmony, NoSQL Now!, Surge, BioWare, Tungsten, deviantART, Aconex, Hadapt, Mathworks, AppDynamics, ScaleOut, Membase, CloudSigma, ManageEngine, Site24x7

16 0.41787961 1069 high scalability-2011-06-28-Sponsored Post: Surge, BioWare, Tungsten, deviantART, Aconex, Hadapt, Mathworks, AppDynamics, ScaleOut, Membase, CloudSigma, ManageEngine, Site24x7

17 0.41402006 1079 high scalability-2011-07-12-Sponsored Post: New Relic, eHarmony, TripAdvisor, NoSQL Now!, Surge, BioWare, Tungsten, deviantART, Aconex, Hadapt, Mathworks, AppDynamics, ScaleOut, Membase, CloudSigma, ManageEngine, Site24x7

18 0.40851048 210 high scalability-2008-01-13-A Note on How to Create Teasers When Posting

19 0.39957774 417 high scalability-2008-10-15-Outside.in Scales Up with Engine Yard and moving from PHP to Ruby on Rails

20 0.38355711 369 high scalability-2008-08-18-Code deployment tools


similar blogs computed by lda model

lda for this blog:

topicId topicWeight

[(21, 0.703)]

similar blogs list:

simIndex simValue blogId blogTitle

same-blog 1 0.99251658 22 high scalability-2007-07-23-Weblink Template

Introduction: Information Sources Platform What's Inside? The Stats Lessons Learned To discuss this article please visit the forums at

2 0.43445402 531 high scalability-2009-03-11-Classifying XTP systems and how cloud changes which type startups will use

Introduction: I try to group XTP in to two main groups, type 1 and 2 and then subdivide type 2 in to 2a and 2b. I describe how I do this grouping and then amplify it a little in the context of cloud services.

3 0.38446927 1268 high scalability-2012-06-20-Ask HighScalability: How do I organize millions of images?

Introduction: Does anyone have any advice or suggestions on how to store millions of images? Currently images are stored in a MS SQL database which performance wise isn't ideal. We'd like to migrate the images over to a file system structure but I'd assume we don't just want to dump millions of images into a single directory. Besides having to contend with naming collisions, the windows filesystem might not perform optimally with that many files. I'm assuming one approach may be to assign each user a unique CSLID, create a folder based on the CSLID and then place one users files in that particular folder. Even so, this could result in hundreds of thousands of folders. Whats the best organizational scheme/heirachy for doing this?

4 0.3841022 238 high scalability-2008-02-04-IPS-IDS for heavy content site

Introduction: All, My site would have heavy content (video/pictures). I'm looking for an efficient IPS/IDS solution which would not introduce much of latency. I'm more familiar with Cisco ASA and also familiar with Juniper, Foundry and others. I also came across snort but haven't used it before. I'm more of looking for an appliance (for the ease of configuration,support etc...) Could any one share their thoughts on performane of IPS/IDS from this vendors? Thanks! Janakan Rajendran

5 0.30831704 951 high scalability-2010-12-01-8 Commonly Used Scalable System Design Patterns

Introduction: Ricky Ho in Scalable System Design Patterns has created a great list of scalability patterns along with very well done explanatory graphics. A summary of the patterns are: Load Balancer - a dispatcher determines which worker instance will handle a request based on different policies. Scatter and Gather - a dispatcher multicasts requests to all workers in a pool. Each worker will compute a local result and send it back to the dispatcher, who will consolidate them into a single response and then send back to the client. Result Cache - a dispatcher will first lookup if the request has been made before and try to find the previous result to return, in order to save the actual execution. Shared Space - all workers monitors information from the shared space and contributes partial knowledge back to the blackboard. The information is continuously enriched until a solution is reached. Pipe and Filter - all workers connected by pipes across which data flows. MapReduc

6 0.30722678 1556 high scalability-2013-11-29-One Story of Life as Told Through Queues

7 0.25493684 277 high scalability-2008-03-16-Do you have any questions for the Elastra CEO?

8 0.14654046 307 high scalability-2008-04-21-Using Google AppEngine for a Little Micro-Scalability

9 0.13263994 1252 high scalability-2012-05-25-Stuff The Internet Says On Scalability For May 25, 2012

10 0.12808327 1535 high scalability-2013-10-21-Google's Sanjay Ghemawat on What Made Google Google and Great Big Data Career Advice

11 0.12743007 1542 high scalability-2013-11-04-ESPN's Architecture at Scale - Operating at 100,000 Duh Nuh Nuhs Per Second

12 0.093507059 1362 high scalability-2012-11-26-BigData using Erlang, C and Lisp to Fight the Tsunami of Mobile Data

13 0.077605233 239 high scalability-2008-02-04-Streaming Video on Amazon EC2?

14 0.048246354 716 high scalability-2009-10-06-Building a Unique Data Warehouse

15 0.037412308 604 high scalability-2009-05-20-Paper: Flux: An Adaptive Partitioning Operator for Continuous Query Systems

16 0.033221029 1002 high scalability-2011-03-09-Productivity vs. Control tradeoffs in PaaS

17 0.023415107 1554 high scalability-2013-11-26-Sponsored Post: Spokeo, Klout, Apple, NuoDB, ScaleOut, MongoDB, BlueStripe, AiScaler, Aerospike, New Relic, LogicMonitor, AppDynamics, ManageEngine, Site24x7

18 0.017013235 1547 high scalability-2013-11-12-Sponsored Post: Klout, Apple, NuoDB, ScaleOut, FreeAgent, CloudStats.me, Intechnica, MongoDB, Stackdriver, BlueStripe, Booking, AiCache, Aerospike, New Relic, LogicMonitor, AppDynamics, ManageEngine, Site24x7

19 0.0 1 high scalability-2007-07-06-Start Here

20 0.0 2 high scalability-2007-07-08-Welcome to High Scalability