high_scalability high_scalability-2008 high_scalability-2008-199 knowledge-graph by maker-knowledge-mining
Source: html
Introduction: Hi all, Has anyone got any experience with using Amazon S3 as an uploaded photo store? I'm writing a website that I need to keep as low budget as possible, and I'm investigating solutions for storing uploaded photos from users - not too many, probably in the low thousands. The site is commercial so I'm straying away from the Flickrs of the world. S3 seems to offer a solution but I'd like to hear from those who have used it before. Thanks Andy
sentIndex sentText sentNum sentScore
1 Hi all, Has anyone got any experience with using Amazon S3 as an uploaded photo store? [sent-1, score-1.166]
2 I'm writing a website that I need to keep as low budget as possible, and I'm investigating solutions for storing uploaded photos from users - not too many, probably in the low thousands. [sent-2, score-2.581]
3 The site is commercial so I'm straying away from the Flickrs of the world. [sent-3, score-0.439]
4 S3 seems to offer a solution but I'd like to hear from those who have used it before. [sent-4, score-0.67]
wordName wordTfidf (topN-words)
[('uploaded', 0.48), ('investigating', 0.327), ('hi', 0.293), ('photo', 0.255), ('budget', 0.228), ('photos', 0.228), ('commercial', 0.227), ('low', 0.223), ('hear', 0.203), ('anyone', 0.154), ('storing', 0.152), ('writing', 0.151), ('offer', 0.144), ('got', 0.14), ('seems', 0.131), ('probably', 0.13), ('solutions', 0.124), ('away', 0.122), ('website', 0.111), ('store', 0.103), ('possible', 0.101), ('experience', 0.097), ('solution', 0.095), ('amazon', 0.093), ('site', 0.09), ('keep', 0.081), ('users', 0.073), ('used', 0.061), ('many', 0.054), ('need', 0.05), ('using', 0.04), ('like', 0.036)]
simIndex simValue blogId blogTitle
same-blog 1 0.99999994 199 high scalability-2008-01-01-S3 for image storing
Introduction: Hi all, Has anyone got any experience with using Amazon S3 as an uploaded photo store? I'm writing a website that I need to keep as low budget as possible, and I'm investigating solutions for storing uploaded photos from users - not too many, probably in the low thousands. The site is commercial so I'm straying away from the Flickrs of the world. S3 seems to offer a solution but I'd like to hear from those who have used it before. Thanks Andy
2 0.27246064 54 high scalability-2007-08-02-Multilanguage Website
Introduction: Hi , someone can point me to some good resurce about how to bulid a multilanguage website ? the only resource i have found is this http://www.indiawebdevelopers.com/technology/multilanguage_support.asp thanks! p.s. great site ;)
3 0.20311794 591 high scalability-2009-05-06-Dyrad
Introduction: The Dryad Project is investigating programming models for writing parallel and distributed programs to scale from a small cluster to a large data-center.
4 0.17970648 106 high scalability-2007-10-02-Secrets to Fotolog's Scaling Success
Introduction: Fotolog, a social blogging site centered around photos, grew from about 300 thousand users in 2004 to over 11 million users in 2007. Though they initially experienced the inevitable pains of rapid growth, they overcame their problems and now manage over 300 million photos and 800,000 new photos are added each day. Generating all that fabulous content are 20 million unique monthly visitors and a volunteer army of 30,000 new users each day. They did so well a very impressed suitor bought them out for a cool $90 million. That's scale meets success by anyone standards. How did they do it? Site: http://www.fotolog.com Information Sources Scaling the World's Largest Photo Blogging Community Congrats to Fotolog on $90mm sale to Hi-Media Fotolog overtaking Flickr? Fotolog Hits 11 Million Members and 300 Million Photos Posted Site of the Week: Fotolog.com by PC Magazine CEO John Borthwick's Blog . DBA Frank Mash's Blog Fotolog, lessons learnt by John B
5 0.16264796 91 high scalability-2007-09-13-Design Preparations for Scaling
Introduction: Hi there, what do you think is crucial in the code designing of a scalable site? How does one prepare for webfarms and clusters (e.g. in PHP)? Thanks, Stephan
6 0.15464132 204 high scalability-2008-01-08-Virus Scanning for Uploaded content
7 0.12806557 152 high scalability-2007-11-13-Flickr Architecture
9 0.12032524 328 high scalability-2008-05-27-Scalable virus scanning for web-applications
10 0.11450847 583 high scalability-2009-04-26-Scale-up vs. Scale-out: A Case Study by IBM using Nutch-Lucene
11 0.113014 122 high scalability-2007-10-14-Product: The Spread Toolkit
12 0.11223002 1197 high scalability-2012-02-21-Pixable Architecture - Crawling, Analyzing, and Ranking 20 Million Photos a Day
13 0.10992338 840 high scalability-2010-06-10-The Four Meta Secrets of Scaling at Facebook
14 0.10989149 1224 high scalability-2012-04-09-The Instagram Architecture Facebook Bought for a Cool Billion Dollars
15 0.10635562 488 high scalability-2009-01-08-file synchronization solutions
16 0.10122114 8 high scalability-2007-07-12-Should I use LAMP or Windows?
17 0.09914612 640 high scalability-2009-06-28-Google Voice Architecture
18 0.098665975 532 high scalability-2009-03-11-Sharding and Connection Pools
19 0.090468228 620 high scalability-2009-06-05-SSL RPC API Scalability
20 0.088093348 167 high scalability-2007-11-27-Starting a website from scratch - what technologies should I use?
topicId topicWeight
[(0, 0.094), (1, 0.037), (2, -0.011), (3, -0.064), (4, 0.014), (5, -0.061), (6, -0.047), (7, -0.045), (8, 0.044), (9, 0.037), (10, -0.026), (11, -0.03), (12, -0.015), (13, -0.005), (14, 0.059), (15, -0.026), (16, -0.012), (17, 0.016), (18, 0.036), (19, 0.007), (20, 0.007), (21, -0.015), (22, -0.039), (23, 0.089), (24, -0.029), (25, -0.093), (26, 0.097), (27, -0.051), (28, 0.034), (29, -0.067), (30, 0.012), (31, 0.027), (32, 0.013), (33, -0.082), (34, 0.017), (35, 0.056), (36, 0.123), (37, -0.118), (38, -0.152), (39, 0.074), (40, 0.061), (41, 0.114), (42, -0.041), (43, -0.023), (44, -0.002), (45, 0.004), (46, -0.034), (47, 0.023), (48, -0.008), (49, -0.021)]
simIndex simValue blogId blogTitle
same-blog 1 0.96902263 199 high scalability-2008-01-01-S3 for image storing
Introduction: Hi all, Has anyone got any experience with using Amazon S3 as an uploaded photo store? I'm writing a website that I need to keep as low budget as possible, and I'm investigating solutions for storing uploaded photos from users - not too many, probably in the low thousands. The site is commercial so I'm straying away from the Flickrs of the world. S3 seems to offer a solution but I'd like to hear from those who have used it before. Thanks Andy
2 0.80129886 54 high scalability-2007-08-02-Multilanguage Website
Introduction: Hi , someone can point me to some good resurce about how to bulid a multilanguage website ? the only resource i have found is this http://www.indiawebdevelopers.com/technology/multilanguage_support.asp thanks! p.s. great site ;)
3 0.70121467 8 high scalability-2007-07-12-Should I use LAMP or Windows?
Introduction: Hi, I stumb l ed on your s i te and I am th i nking about start i ng a website. I haven't rece i ved a good answer about what I shou l d use to bui l d i t, so I thought I wou l d give it a shot. I am a w i ndows guy. I know .Net and ASP and how to bu i ld web s i tes using that stack. But I not i ce most sites use LAMP and that's what most people ta l k about using. What's wrong w i th using Windows? .Net Programmer
4 0.69551808 91 high scalability-2007-09-13-Design Preparations for Scaling
Introduction: Hi there, what do you think is crucial in the code designing of a scalable site? How does one prepare for webfarms and clusters (e.g. in PHP)? Thanks, Stephan
5 0.62786084 611 high scalability-2009-05-31-Need help on Site loading & database optimization - URGENT
Introduction: Hi Friends, I need some help in making site access fast. On an average my site has the traffic 2500 hits per day and on 16th May it had 60,000 hits. On this day site was loading very slow even it was getting time out. I also check out the processes running by using "top" command it was indicating mysql was taking too much load. There are around 166 tables (Including PHPBB forum) in my database. All contents on site are displayed by fetching it from database. I have also added indexing to respective tables where it is required. Plain PHP/HTML coding is used. Technology: PHP -- 5.2 MYSQL -- 5.0 Apache -- 2.0 Linux Following is all the server details of my site: CPU : Single Socket Dual Core AMD Opteron 1212HE Memory: 2GB DDR RAM Hard Drive: 250GB SATA Ethernet: 100Mb Primary Ethernet Card (/var/log) # uname -a Linux 2.6.9-67.0.15.ELsmp #1 SMP Tue Apr 22 13:50:33 EDT 2008 i686 athlon i386 GNU/Linux kernel version: 2.6.9-67.0.15.ELsmp (/var/log) # free -m total used
6 0.59491682 632 high scalability-2009-06-15-starting small with growth in mind
7 0.58975929 262 high scalability-2008-02-26-Architecture to Allow High Availability File Upload
8 0.58567536 167 high scalability-2007-11-27-Starting a website from scratch - what technologies should I use?
9 0.58546168 144 high scalability-2007-11-07-What CDN would you recommend?
10 0.57282072 206 high scalability-2008-01-10-MONO ASP.NET. Will it make the web???
11 0.57229429 375 high scalability-2008-09-01-A Scalability checklist?
12 0.56831872 238 high scalability-2008-02-04-IPS-IDS for heavy content site
13 0.5520469 287 high scalability-2008-03-24-Advertise
14 0.55065995 232 high scalability-2008-01-29-When things aren't scalable
15 0.54740876 66 high scalability-2007-08-16-What tech is used to build your favorite site?
16 0.54692686 276 high scalability-2008-03-15-New Website Design Considerations
17 0.53955972 338 high scalability-2008-06-02-Total Cost of Ownership for different web development frameworks
18 0.51656896 1399 high scalability-2013-02-05-Ask HighScalability: Memcached and Relations
19 0.50844169 71 high scalability-2007-08-22-Profiling WEB applications
20 0.50110227 202 high scalability-2008-01-06-Email Architecture
topicId topicWeight
[(1, 0.133), (2, 0.173), (17, 0.287), (61, 0.242)]
simIndex simValue blogId blogTitle
1 0.86712134 631 high scalability-2009-06-15-Large-scale Graph Computing at Google
Introduction: To continue the graph theme Google has got into the act and released information on Pregel . Pregel does not appear to be a new type of potato chip. Pregel is instead a scalable infrastructure... ...to mine a wide range of graphs. In Pregel, programs are expressed as a sequence of iterations. In each iteration, a vertex can, independently of other vertices, receive messages sent to it in the previous iteration, send messages to other vertices, modify its own and its outgoing edges' states, and mutate the graph's topology. Currently, Pregel scales to billions of vertices and edges, but this limit will keep expanding. Pregel's applicability is harder to quantify, but so far we haven't come across a type of graph or a practical graph computing problem which is not solvable with Pregel. It computes over large graphs much faster than alternatives, and the application programming interface is easy to use. Implementing PageRank, for example, takes only about 15 lines of code. Developers
same-blog 2 0.86434555 199 high scalability-2008-01-01-S3 for image storing
Introduction: Hi all, Has anyone got any experience with using Amazon S3 as an uploaded photo store? I'm writing a website that I need to keep as low budget as possible, and I'm investigating solutions for storing uploaded photos from users - not too many, probably in the low thousands. The site is commercial so I'm straying away from the Flickrs of the world. S3 seems to offer a solution but I'd like to hear from those who have used it before. Thanks Andy
3 0.83888686 506 high scalability-2009-02-03-10 More Rules for Even Faster Websites
Introduction: Update: How-To Minimize Load Time for Fast User Experiences . Shows how to analyze the bottlenecks preventing websites and blogs from loading quickly and how to resolve them. 80-90% of the end-user response time is spent on the frontend, so it makes sense to concentrate efforts there before heroically rewriting the backend. Take a shower before buying a Porsche, if you know what I mean. Steve Souders, author of High Performance Websites and Yslow , has ten more best practices to speed up your website : Split the initial payload Load scripts without blocking Don’t scatter scripts Split dominant content domains Make static content cookie-free Reduce cookie weight Minify CSS Optimize images Use iframes sparingly To www or not to www Sadly, according to String Theory, there are only 26.7 rules left, so get them while they're still in our dimension. Here are slides on the first few rules. Love the speeding dog slide. That's exactly what my dog looks like trav
4 0.81190115 1393 high scalability-2013-01-24-NoSQL Parody: say No! No! and No!
Introduction: While certainly not in the same class as Hilarious Video: Relational Database vs NoSQL Fanbois or NSFW: Hilarious Fault-Tolerance Cartoon , this parody does have some really good moments:
5 0.79610223 869 high scalability-2010-07-30-Hot Scalability Links for July 30, 2010
Introduction: Jeremy Zawodny, while performing data alchemy in the dungeons of Craigslist, stored 1,250,000,000 Key/Value Pairs in Redis on a 32GB Machine . Data sorting world record: 1 terabyte, 1 minute . The system has 52 computer nodes, each node is a commodity server with two quad-core processors, 24 gigabytes (GB) memory and sixteen 500 GB disks . It's not just hardware though, they also built a software that utilized all their CPU and RAM. Tweets of Gold: wm : I am really getting the sense that none of you yokels waxing profound about scalability actually has anything factual to say joestump : I think you can do things to *mitigate* pain points up front. You don't need to over-engineer, but it's not hard to look forward. danielcrenna : I love it when I check in debug code accidentally and it turns into a three day hunt for a major scalability problem joestump : Your post also makes me think of another phrase I say often: Scaling == Specialization. Bigger scale =
6 0.77627057 956 high scalability-2010-12-08-How To Get Experience Working With Large Datasets
7 0.77169573 1467 high scalability-2013-05-30-Google Finds NUMA Up to 20% Slower for Gmail and Websearch
8 0.76952839 543 high scalability-2009-03-17-Sun to Announce Open Cloud APIs at CommunityOne
9 0.7689715 1225 high scalability-2012-04-09-Why My Slime Mold is Better than Your Hadoop Cluster
10 0.7583406 877 high scalability-2010-08-12-Designing Web Applications for Scalability
11 0.73621213 1184 high scalability-2012-01-31-Performance in the Cloud: Business Jitter is Bad
12 0.73579776 675 high scalability-2009-08-08-1dbase vs. many and cloud hosting vs. dedicated server(s)?
13 0.73271161 501 high scalability-2009-01-25-Where do I start?
14 0.73185092 322 high scalability-2008-05-19-Conference: Infoscale 2008 in Italy (June 4-6)
15 0.73131847 173 high scalability-2007-12-05-Easier Production Releases
16 0.72371727 1411 high scalability-2013-02-22-Stuff The Internet Says On Scalability For February 22, 2013
17 0.72344613 930 high scalability-2010-10-28-NoSQL Took Away the Relational Model and Gave Nothing Back
18 0.72108305 150 high scalability-2007-11-12-Slashdot Architecture - How the Old Man of the Internet Learned to Scale
19 0.71875417 1287 high scalability-2012-07-20-Stuff The Internet Says On Scalability For July 20, 2012
20 0.71659791 793 high scalability-2010-03-10-Saying Yes to NoSQL; Going Steady with Cassandra at Digg