high_scalability high_scalability-2008 high_scalability-2008-213 knowledge-graph by maker-knowledge-mining

213 high scalability-2008-01-15-Does Sun Buying MySQL Change Your Scaling Strategy?


meta infos for this blog

Source: html

Introduction: Sun is buying MySQL for $1 billion. The MySQL team has worked long and hard so I don't begrudge them their pay day. Strike while the iron is offering a lot of cash I say. And I have nothing against Sun. Yet I can't help but think this changes the mental calculation of what database to use. When Oracle acquired Innobase a new independent storage engine was needed for MySQL. How is this different? Does this change your thinking any? Would Martha say it's a good thing? Like Luke I've searched my feelings, but the force is not with me and I don't really know how I feel about it.


Summary: the most important sentenses genereted by tfidf model

sentIndex sentText sentNum sentScore

1 The MySQL team has worked long and hard so I don't begrudge them their pay day. [sent-2, score-0.49]

2 Strike while the iron is offering a lot of cash I say. [sent-3, score-0.68]

3 Yet I can't help but think this changes the mental calculation of what database to use. [sent-5, score-0.743]

4 When Oracle acquired Innobase a new independent storage engine was needed for MySQL. [sent-6, score-0.679]

5 Like Luke I've searched my feelings, but the force is not with me and I don't really know how I feel about it. [sent-10, score-0.686]


similar blogs computed by tfidf model

tfidf for this blog:

wordName wordTfidf (topN-words)

[('feelings', 0.317), ('strike', 0.317), ('luke', 0.28), ('searched', 0.259), ('mental', 0.244), ('iron', 0.238), ('cash', 0.232), ('acquired', 0.232), ('calculation', 0.227), ('sun', 0.185), ('force', 0.176), ('buying', 0.17), ('offering', 0.157), ('mysql', 0.154), ('independent', 0.149), ('feel', 0.134), ('worked', 0.13), ('thinking', 0.12), ('oracle', 0.116), ('nothing', 0.115), ('pay', 0.114), ('engine', 0.108), ('yet', 0.102), ('thing', 0.098), ('needed', 0.097), ('changes', 0.093), ('say', 0.092), ('team', 0.09), ('hard', 0.079), ('change', 0.079), ('long', 0.077), ('help', 0.074), ('ca', 0.074), ('think', 0.062), ('know', 0.059), ('really', 0.058), ('storage', 0.058), ('lot', 0.053), ('different', 0.052), ('good', 0.05), ('would', 0.046), ('database', 0.043), ('new', 0.035), ('like', 0.03)]

similar blogs list:

simIndex simValue blogId blogTitle

same-blog 1 1.0 213 high scalability-2008-01-15-Does Sun Buying MySQL Change Your Scaling Strategy?

Introduction: Sun is buying MySQL for $1 billion. The MySQL team has worked long and hard so I don't begrudge them their pay day. Strike while the iron is offering a lot of cash I say. And I have nothing against Sun. Yet I can't help but think this changes the mental calculation of what database to use. When Oracle acquired Innobase a new independent storage engine was needed for MySQL. How is this different? Does this change your thinking any? Would Martha say it's a good thing? Like Luke I've searched my feelings, but the force is not with me and I don't really know how I feel about it.

2 0.10734589 418 high scalability-2008-10-15-Sun Customer Ready HPC Cluster: Reference Configurations with Sun Fire X2200 M2 and X2100 M2 Servers

Introduction: The reference configurations described in this blueprint are starting points for building Sun Customer Ready HPC Clusters configured with Sun Fire X2100 M2 and X2200 M2 servers. The configurations define how Sun Systems Group products can be configured in a typical grid rack deployment. This document describes configurations in detail using Sun Fire X2100 M2 and X2200 M2 servers with a Gigabit Ethernet data fabric, as well as configurations using Sun Fire X2200 M2 servers with a high-speed InfiniBand fabric. These configurations focus on single rack solutions, with external connections through uplink ports of the switches. These reference configurations have been architected using Sun's expertise gained in actual, real-world installations. Within certain constraints, as described in the later sections, the system can be tailored to the customer needs. Certain system components described in this document are only available through Sun's factory integration. Although the information

3 0.097576834 543 high scalability-2009-03-17-Sun to Announce Open Cloud APIs at CommunityOne

Introduction: One of the key items Sun will be talking about in today's cloud computing announcement (at 9AM EST/6AM PST) will be Sun's opening of the APIs that we'll use for the Sun Cloud. We're making these available so that those who are interested will be able to review and comment on these APIs. Continuing our commitment to openness, we're making these APIs available via the Creative Commons Version 3.0 license. ...

4 0.097500794 196 high scalability-2007-12-30-MySQL clustering strategies and comparisions

Introduction: Compare: 1. MySQL Clustering(ndb-cluster stogare) 2. MySQL / GFS-GNBD/ HA 3. MySQL / DRBD /HA 4. MySQL Write Master / Multiple MySQL Read Slaves 5. Standalone MySQL Servers(Functionally seperated)

5 0.096934736 547 high scalability-2009-03-24-Scalability Perspectives #6: Lew Tucker – Virtual Data Centers in the Open Cloud

Introduction: Scalability Perspectives is a series of posts that highlights the ideas that will shape the next decade of IT architecture. Each post is dedicated to a thought leader of the information age and his vision of the future. Be warned though – the journey into the minds and perspectives of these people requires an open mind. Lew Tucker Lew Tucker is the Vice President and CTO of Sun Microsystems’ Cloud Computing initiative. Lew’s career has been focused on scalable computing and web development. Lew worked at Sun Microsystems through the 1990’s. In 2002, Lew joined Salesforce.com and led the design and implementation of App Exchange. After Salesforce.com, Lew was CTO at Radar Networks, where he focused on the scalable design and build out of its semantic web service. The Sun Cloud API Sun has recently announced its open RESTful API for creating and managing cloud resources, including compute, storage, and networking components. Lew and his team is busy implementing

6 0.095421121 456 high scalability-2008-12-01-Sun's High-Performance and Reliable Web Proxy Solution

7 0.091359824 486 high scalability-2009-01-07-Sun Acquires Q-layer in Cloud Computing Play

8 0.087678097 504 high scalability-2009-01-29-Event: MySQL Conference & Expo 2009

9 0.085664615 1508 high scalability-2013-08-28-Sean Hull's 20 Biggest Bottlenecks that Reduce and Slow Down Scalability

10 0.084537953 214 high scalability-2008-01-15-Sun to Acquire MySQL

11 0.083182111 73 high scalability-2007-08-23-Postgresql on high availability websites?

12 0.077517733 640 high scalability-2009-06-28-Google Voice Architecture

13 0.077105522 17 high scalability-2007-07-16-Paper: Guide to Cost-effective Database Scale-Out using MySQL

14 0.07624165 399 high scalability-2008-10-01-Joyent - Cloud Computing Built on Accelerators

15 0.075438611 411 high scalability-2008-10-14-Implementing the Lustre File System with Sun Storage: High Performance Storage for High Performance Computing

16 0.075023979 1030 high scalability-2011-04-27-Heroku Emergency Strategy: Incident Command System and 8 Hour Ops Rotations for Fresh Minds

17 0.074298866 185 high scalability-2007-12-13-Is premature scalation a real disease?

18 0.07222832 303 high scalability-2008-04-18-Scaling Mania at MySQL Conference 2008

19 0.07159587 269 high scalability-2008-03-08-Audiogalaxy.com Architecture

20 0.071169756 517 high scalability-2009-02-21-Google AppEngine - A Second Look


similar blogs computed by lsi model

lsi for this blog:

topicId topicWeight

[(0, 0.098), (1, 0.039), (2, -0.007), (3, -0.001), (4, 0.001), (5, 0.001), (6, -0.071), (7, -0.056), (8, 0.001), (9, 0.001), (10, -0.047), (11, -0.001), (12, 0.083), (13, 0.097), (14, 0.061), (15, 0.019), (16, -0.029), (17, 0.013), (18, -0.03), (19, 0.006), (20, 0.078), (21, -0.089), (22, 0.031), (23, -0.015), (24, -0.055), (25, 0.094), (26, 0.044), (27, -0.018), (28, 0.078), (29, -0.024), (30, -0.03), (31, 0.03), (32, 0.011), (33, 0.018), (34, 0.001), (35, -0.023), (36, -0.031), (37, 0.033), (38, 0.037), (39, -0.041), (40, 0.019), (41, 0.015), (42, 0.016), (43, 0.01), (44, -0.032), (45, -0.003), (46, -0.01), (47, 0.017), (48, 0.033), (49, -0.025)]

similar blogs list:

simIndex simValue blogId blogTitle

same-blog 1 0.94743562 213 high scalability-2008-01-15-Does Sun Buying MySQL Change Your Scaling Strategy?

Introduction: Sun is buying MySQL for $1 billion. The MySQL team has worked long and hard so I don't begrudge them their pay day. Strike while the iron is offering a lot of cash I say. And I have nothing against Sun. Yet I can't help but think this changes the mental calculation of what database to use. When Oracle acquired Innobase a new independent storage engine was needed for MySQL. How is this different? Does this change your thinking any? Would Martha say it's a good thing? Like Luke I've searched my feelings, but the force is not with me and I don't really know how I feel about it.

2 0.78814268 214 high scalability-2008-01-15-Sun to Acquire MySQL

Introduction: So what are we announcing today? That in addition to acquiring MySQL, Sun will be unveiling new global support offerings into the MySQL marketplace. We'll be investing in both the community, and the marketplace - to accelerate the industry's phase change away from proprietary technology to the new world of open web platforms. Read more on Jonathan Schwartz's Blog What do you think about this?

3 0.75200033 333 high scalability-2008-05-28-Webinar: Designing and Implementing Scalable Applications with Memcached and MySQL

Introduction: The following technical Webinar could be of interest to the community. WHO: Farhan "Frank" Mashraqi, Director of Business Operations and Technical Strategy, Fotolog Inc Monty Taylor, Senior Consultant, Sun Microsystems Jimmy Guerrero, Sr Product Marketing Manager, Sun Microsystems - Database Group WHAT: Designing and Implementing Scalable Applications with Memcached and MySQL web presentation. WHEN: Thursday, May 29, 2008, 10:00 am PST, 1:00 pm EST, 18:00 GMT The presentation will be approximately 45 minutes long followed by Q&A.; Check out the details here !

4 0.71942437 303 high scalability-2008-04-18-Scaling Mania at MySQL Conference 2008

Introduction: The 2008 MySQL Conference & Expo has now closed, but what is still open for viewing is all the MySQL scaling knowledge that was shared. Planet MySQL is a great source of the goings on: Scaling out MySQL: Hardware today and tomorrow by Jeremy Cole and Eric Bergen of Proven Scaling. In it are answered all the big questions of life: What about 64-bit? How many cores? How much memory? Shared storage? Finally we learn the secrets of true happiness. Panel Video: Scaling MySQL? Up or Out? . Don't have time? Take a look at the Diamond Note excellent game day summary. Companies like MySQL, Sun, Flickr, Fotolog, Wikipedia, Facebook and YouTube share intel on how many web servers they have, how they handle failure, and how they scale. Kevin Burton in Scaling MySQL and Java in High Write Throughput Environments - How we built Spinn3r shows how they crawl and index 500k posts per hour using MySQL and 40 servers. Venu Anuganti channels Dathan Pattishall's talk on scaling heavy con

5 0.70251447 1060 high scalability-2011-06-14-Shakespeare on Why Other People Like Such Stupid Stuff

Introduction: Jumping around the social mediasphere, it's not uncommon to feel the heat generated in praise of a favorite this or that over all the clearly inferior alternatives. Whilst human nature may never cool, I think Old Will had some insight worth considering the next time a flame threatens to flicker forth: My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun (Sonnet 130) My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun; Coral is far more red than her lips' red ; If snow be white, why then her breasts are dun; If hairs be wires, black wires grow on her head. I have seen roses damask, red and white, But no such roses see I in her cheeks; And in some perfumes is there more delight Than in the breath that from my mistress reeks. I love to hear her speak, yet well I know That music hath a far more pleasing sound; I grant I never saw a goddess go; My mistress, when she walks, treads on the ground: And yet, by heaven, I think my love as rare As any she belied with false compare. –Willia

6 0.67108804 502 high scalability-2009-01-26-Paper: Scalability by Design - Coding for Systems With Large CPU Counts

7 0.67001963 465 high scalability-2008-12-14-Scaling MySQL on a 256-way T5440 server using Solaris ZFS and Java 1.7

8 0.66224408 543 high scalability-2009-03-17-Sun to Announce Open Cloud APIs at CommunityOne

9 0.65359926 504 high scalability-2009-01-29-Event: MySQL Conference & Expo 2009

10 0.63048816 418 high scalability-2008-10-15-Sun Customer Ready HPC Cluster: Reference Configurations with Sun Fire X2200 M2 and X2100 M2 Servers

11 0.62819111 16 high scalability-2007-07-16-Book: High Performance MySQL

12 0.61106646 17 high scalability-2007-07-16-Paper: Guide to Cost-effective Database Scale-Out using MySQL

13 0.5888741 62 high scalability-2007-08-08-Partial String Matching

14 0.5871067 454 high scalability-2008-12-01-Deploying MySQL Database in Solaris Cluster Environments

15 0.58470529 196 high scalability-2007-12-30-MySQL clustering strategies and comparisions

16 0.5841074 586 high scalability-2009-04-29-Presentations: MySQL Conference & Expo 2009

17 0.57898015 457 high scalability-2008-12-01-Sun FireTM X4540 Server as Backup Server for Zmanda's Amanda Enterprise 2.6 Software

18 0.57820308 770 high scalability-2010-02-03-NoSQL Means Never Having to Store Blobs Again

19 0.54398531 455 high scalability-2008-12-01-MySQL Database Scale-out and Replication for High Growth Businesses

20 0.53562278 487 high scalability-2009-01-08-Paper: Sharding with Oracle Database


similar blogs computed by lda model

lda for this blog:

topicId topicWeight

[(2, 0.285), (6, 0.295), (10, 0.07), (61, 0.062), (79, 0.146)]

similar blogs list:

simIndex simValue blogId blogTitle

1 0.89395678 104 high scalability-2007-10-01-SmugMug Found their Perfect Storage Array

Introduction: SmugMug's CEO & Chief Geek Don MacAskill smugly (hard to resist) gushes over finally finding, after a long and arduous quest, their "best bang-for-the-buck storage array." It's the Dell MD300 . His in-depth explanation of why he prefers the MD3000 should help anyone with their own painful storage deliberations. His key points are: The price is right; DAS via SAS, 15 spindles at 15K rpm each, 512MB of mirrored battery-backed write cache; You can disable read caching; You can disable read-ahead prefetching; The stripe sizes are configurable up to 512KB; The controller ignores host-based flush commands by default; They support an ‘Enhanced JBOD’ mode. His reasoning for the desirability each option is astute and he even gives you the configuration options for carrying out the configuration. This is not your average CEO. Don also speculates that a three tier system using flash (system RAM + flash storage + RAID disks) is a possible future direction. Unfortunately, flash

2 0.88483608 529 high scalability-2009-03-10-Paper: Consensus Protocols: Paxos

Introduction: Update:  Barbara Liskov’s Turing Award, and Byzantine Fault Tolerance . Henry Robinson has created an excellent series of articles on consensus protocols. We already covered his 2 Phase Commit article and he also has a 3 Phase Commit article showing how to handle 2PC under single node failures. But that is not enough! 3PC works well under node failures, but fails for network failures. So another consensus mechanism is needed that handles both network and node failures. And that's Paxos . Paxos correctly handles both types of failures, but it does this by becoming inaccessible if too many components fail. This is the "liveness" property of protocols. Paxos waits until the faults are fixed. Read queries can be handled, but updates will be blocked until the protocol thinks it can make forward progress. The liveness of Paxos is primarily dependent on network stability. In a distributed heterogeneous environment you are at risk of losing the ability to make updates. Users hate t

same-blog 3 0.87433565 213 high scalability-2008-01-15-Does Sun Buying MySQL Change Your Scaling Strategy?

Introduction: Sun is buying MySQL for $1 billion. The MySQL team has worked long and hard so I don't begrudge them their pay day. Strike while the iron is offering a lot of cash I say. And I have nothing against Sun. Yet I can't help but think this changes the mental calculation of what database to use. When Oracle acquired Innobase a new independent storage engine was needed for MySQL. How is this different? Does this change your thinking any? Would Martha say it's a good thing? Like Luke I've searched my feelings, but the force is not with me and I don't really know how I feel about it.

4 0.86679053 710 high scalability-2009-09-20-PaxosLease: Diskless Paxos for Leases

Introduction: PaxosLease is a distributed algorithm for lease negotiation. It is based on Paxos, but does not require disk writes or clock synchrony. PaxosLease is used for master lease negotation in the open-source Keyspace replicated key-value store.

5 0.85820192 794 high scalability-2010-03-11-What would you like to ask Justin.tv?

Introduction: It looks like I'll have the chance to interview someone tomorrow from Justin.tv about their architecture, which is pretty exciting given their leadership role in live broadcasting. They get 30 million uniques a month, can handle 1 million simultaneous broadcasts and hope to grow another magnitude in the near future. That must take some doing. Here's your opportunity, especially if you think my questions suck, to ask your own sucky questions :-) What would you like to know about Justin.tv?

6 0.83366877 832 high scalability-2010-05-31-Scalable federated security with Kerberos

7 0.76002795 1423 high scalability-2013-03-13-Iron.io Moved From Ruby to Go: 28 Servers Cut and Colossal Clusterf**ks Prevented

8 0.72875512 862 high scalability-2010-07-20-Strategy: Consider When a Service Starts Billing in Your Algorithm Cost

9 0.72252893 1266 high scalability-2012-06-18-Google on Latency Tolerant Systems: Making a Predictable Whole Out of Unpredictable Parts

10 0.72150731 230 high scalability-2008-01-29-Speed up (Oracle) database code with result caching

11 0.71575981 620 high scalability-2009-06-05-SSL RPC API Scalability

12 0.71528167 353 high scalability-2008-07-20-Strategy: Front S3 with a Caching Proxy

13 0.71176988 533 high scalability-2009-03-11-The Implications of Punctuated Scalabilium for Website Architecture

14 0.71134537 1017 high scalability-2011-04-06-Netflix: Run Consistency Checkers All the time to Fixup Transactions

15 0.71096307 417 high scalability-2008-10-15-Outside.in Scales Up with Engine Yard and moving from PHP to Ruby on Rails

16 0.70993167 1418 high scalability-2013-03-06-Low Level Scalability Solutions - The Aggregation Collection

17 0.70854837 1491 high scalability-2013-07-15-Ask HS: What's Wrong with Twitter, Why Isn't One Machine Enough?

18 0.70703864 1413 high scalability-2013-02-27-42 Monster Problems that Attack as Loads Increase

19 0.70632148 844 high scalability-2010-06-18-Paper: The Declarative Imperative: Experiences and Conjectures in Distributed Logic

20 0.70629609 526 high scalability-2009-03-05-Strategy: In Cloud Computing Systematically Drive Load to the CPU