high_scalability high_scalability-2013 high_scalability-2013-1393 knowledge-graph by maker-knowledge-mining

1393 high scalability-2013-01-24-NoSQL Parody: say No! No! and No!


meta infos for this blog

Source: html

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:


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)

[('hilarious', 0.696), ('fanbois', 0.403), ('cartoon', 0.337), ('moments', 0.32), ('certainly', 0.188), ('class', 0.161), ('vs', 0.148), ('relational', 0.13), ('video', 0.128), ('nosql', 0.11), ('really', 0.066), ('good', 0.056), ('database', 0.049)]

similar blogs list:

simIndex simValue blogId blogTitle

same-blog 1 1.0 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:

2 0.53975761 1119 high scalability-2011-09-20-HighScalability is old news. Step your scaling game way up... (NSFW cartoon)

Introduction: Jeremy Raines tweeted a link to this cartoon  my new filing technique is unstoppable , showing how scotch tape can be used to create a new super-database. Very funny in a Dilbert sort of way, but definitely not NSFW...   For more on Twisted Tuesday, you may enjoy: Hilarious Video: Relational Database Vs NoSQL Fanbois NSFW: Hilarious Fault-Tolerance Cartoon

3 0.22947624 1026 high scalability-2011-04-18-6 Ways Not to Scale that Will Make You Hip, Popular and Loved By VCs

Introduction: This is a hilarious presentation by Josh Berkus , called Scale Fail , given at O'Reilly MySQL CE 2011. Josh is entertaining, well spoken, and cleverly hides insight inside chaos. And he makes some dang good points along the way. Josh has a problem, you see Josh has learned how to make sites that are both scalable and reliable. So he's puzzled why companies "whose downtime interfaces (Twitter) are more well known than their uptime interfaces" get all the attention, respect, and money for being failures. Just doing your job doesn't make you a hero.  You need these self-inflicted wounds in-order to have the war stories to share at conferences. They get the attention. Just doing your job is boring. This is so unfair in that way life can be.  So if you want to turn the tables and take the low road to fame and fortune, here's Josh's program for learning how not to scale: Be trendy . Use the tool that has the most buzz: NoSQL, Cloud, MapReduce, Rails, RabbitMQ. It helps you no

4 0.16684964 1357 high scalability-2012-11-12-Gone Fishin': Hilarious Video: Relational Database Vs NoSQL Fanbois

Introduction: This is an all time favorite post. Even though I've seen this video a hundred times I still can't help but laugh... This is so funny I laughed until I cried! Definitely NSFW. OMG it's hilarious, but it's also not a bad overview of the issues. Especially loved: You read the latest post on HighScalability.com and think you are a f*cking Google and architect and parrot slogans like Web Scale and Sharding but you have no idea what the f*ck you are talking about . There are so many more gems like that. Thanks to Alex Popescu for posting this on  MongoDB is Web Scale . Whoever made this deserves a Webby.

5 0.16178413 895 high scalability-2010-09-05-Hilarious Video: Relational Database vs NoSQL Fanbois

Introduction: This is so funny I laughed until I cried! Definitely NSFW. OMG it's hilarious, but it's also not a bad overview of the issues. Especially loved: You read the latest post on HighScalability.com and think you are a f*cking Google and architect and parrot slogans like Web Scale and Sharding but you have no idea what the f*ck you are talking about . There are so many more gems like that. Thanks to Alex Popescu for posting this on  MongoDB is Web Scale . Whoever made this deserves a Webby.

6 0.10511162 224 high scalability-2008-01-27-Scalability vs Performance vs Availability vs Reliability.. Also scale up vs scale out ???

7 0.091282636 931 high scalability-2010-10-28-Notes from A NOSQL Evening in Palo Alto

8 0.088599771 1114 high scalability-2011-09-13-Must see: 5 Steps to Scaling MongoDB (Or Any DB) in 8 Minutes

9 0.073006414 991 high scalability-2011-02-16-Paper: An Experimental Investigation of the Akamai Adaptive Video Streaming

10 0.07137771 954 high scalability-2010-12-06-What the heck are you actually using NoSQL for?

11 0.06373471 739 high scalability-2009-11-09-10 NoSQL Systems Reviewed

12 0.062313415 796 high scalability-2010-03-16-Justin.tv's Live Video Broadcasting Architecture

13 0.061864663 1359 high scalability-2012-11-15-Gone Fishin': Justin.Tv's Live Video Broadcasting Architecture

14 0.055336557 842 high scalability-2010-06-16-Hot Scalability Links for June 16, 2010

15 0.054286525 1201 high scalability-2012-02-29-Strategy: Put Mobile Video Into Cold Storage After 30 Days

16 0.051278595 930 high scalability-2010-10-28-NoSQL Took Away the Relational Model and Gave Nothing Back

17 0.049007356 274 high scalability-2008-03-12-YouTube Architecture

18 0.047668681 1064 high scalability-2011-06-20-35+ Use Cases for Choosing Your Next NoSQL Database

19 0.047317568 885 high scalability-2010-08-23-Building a Scalable Key-Value Database: Project Hydracus

20 0.046877135 1154 high scalability-2011-12-09-Stuff The Internet Says On Scalability For December 9, 2011


similar blogs computed by lsi model

lsi for this blog:

topicId topicWeight

[(0, 0.032), (1, 0.022), (2, -0.0), (3, 0.029), (4, 0.031), (5, 0.039), (6, -0.059), (7, -0.013), (8, 0.027), (9, -0.027), (10, -0.023), (11, -0.056), (12, -0.055), (13, 0.018), (14, -0.014), (15, 0.015), (16, 0.06), (17, 0.048), (18, -0.054), (19, -0.067), (20, -0.061), (21, -0.047), (22, 0.03), (23, -0.039), (24, 0.061), (25, 0.01), (26, -0.002), (27, 0.032), (28, 0.006), (29, 0.035), (30, -0.025), (31, -0.014), (32, 0.042), (33, 0.004), (34, 0.034), (35, -0.005), (36, -0.057), (37, -0.08), (38, -0.018), (39, 0.055), (40, 0.063), (41, 0.018), (42, -0.026), (43, -0.01), (44, -0.03), (45, 0.013), (46, 0.063), (47, -0.04), (48, 0.089), (49, -0.002)]

similar blogs list:

simIndex simValue blogId blogTitle

same-blog 1 0.95819014 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:

2 0.93534273 1119 high scalability-2011-09-20-HighScalability is old news. Step your scaling game way up... (NSFW cartoon)

Introduction: Jeremy Raines tweeted a link to this cartoon  my new filing technique is unstoppable , showing how scotch tape can be used to create a new super-database. Very funny in a Dilbert sort of way, but definitely not NSFW...   For more on Twisted Tuesday, you may enjoy: Hilarious Video: Relational Database Vs NoSQL Fanbois NSFW: Hilarious Fault-Tolerance Cartoon

3 0.65403408 745 high scalability-2009-11-25-Brian Aker's Hilarious NoSQL Stand Up Routine

Introduction: Brian Aker gave this 10 minute lightning talk on NoSQL at the Nov 2009 OpenSQLCamp in Portland, Oregon. It's incredibly funny, probably because there's a lot of truth to what he's saying. Here are the slides  and here are the notes . Found though #nosql.

4 0.64243758 1357 high scalability-2012-11-12-Gone Fishin': Hilarious Video: Relational Database Vs NoSQL Fanbois

Introduction: This is an all time favorite post. Even though I've seen this video a hundred times I still can't help but laugh... This is so funny I laughed until I cried! Definitely NSFW. OMG it's hilarious, but it's also not a bad overview of the issues. Especially loved: You read the latest post on HighScalability.com and think you are a f*cking Google and architect and parrot slogans like Web Scale and Sharding but you have no idea what the f*ck you are talking about . There are so many more gems like that. Thanks to Alex Popescu for posting this on  MongoDB is Web Scale . Whoever made this deserves a Webby.

5 0.58790737 895 high scalability-2010-09-05-Hilarious Video: Relational Database vs NoSQL Fanbois

Introduction: This is so funny I laughed until I cried! Definitely NSFW. OMG it's hilarious, but it's also not a bad overview of the issues. Especially loved: You read the latest post on HighScalability.com and think you are a f*cking Google and architect and parrot slogans like Web Scale and Sharding but you have no idea what the f*ck you are talking about . There are so many more gems like that. Thanks to Alex Popescu for posting this on  MongoDB is Web Scale . Whoever made this deserves a Webby.

6 0.57546592 739 high scalability-2009-11-09-10 NoSQL Systems Reviewed

7 0.55825776 875 high scalability-2010-08-09-NoSQL on the Microsoft Platform

8 0.55734617 648 high scalability-2009-07-02-It Must be Crap on Relational Dabases Week

9 0.55109966 1262 high scalability-2012-06-11-Monday Fun: Seven Databases in Song

10 0.5404858 749 high scalability-2009-12-15-The Common Principles Behind the NOSQL Alternatives

11 0.52800941 872 high scalability-2010-08-05-Pairing NoSQL and Relational Data Storage: MySQL with MongoDB

12 0.51975811 239 high scalability-2008-02-04-Streaming Video on Amazon EC2?

13 0.50857532 931 high scalability-2010-10-28-Notes from A NOSQL Evening in Palo Alto

14 0.50802231 991 high scalability-2011-02-16-Paper: An Experimental Investigation of the Akamai Adaptive Video Streaming

15 0.50434774 940 high scalability-2010-11-12-Stuff the Internet Says on Scalability For November 12th, 2010

16 0.50306904 737 high scalability-2009-11-05-A Yes for a NoSQL Taxonomy

17 0.50190407 1201 high scalability-2012-02-29-Strategy: Put Mobile Video Into Cold Storage After 30 Days

18 0.49825913 874 high scalability-2010-08-07-ArchCamp: Scalable Databases (NoSQL)

19 0.48796842 867 high scalability-2010-07-27-YeSQL: An Overview of the Various Query Semantics in the Post Only-SQL World

20 0.48280591 930 high scalability-2010-10-28-NoSQL Took Away the Relational Model and Gave Nothing Back


similar blogs computed by lda model

lda for this blog:

topicId topicWeight

[(17, 0.462), (79, 0.28)]

similar blogs list:

simIndex simValue blogId blogTitle

same-blog 1 0.86209458 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:

2 0.70816386 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. ...

3 0.62307233 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 0.61682278 1225 high scalability-2012-04-09-Why My Slime Mold is Better than Your Hadoop Cluster

Introduction: Update :  Organism without a brain creates external memories for navigation shows slime mold is even cooler than originally thought, storing a record of where it's been using slime: The authors conclude, the slime isn't just the mold's calling card. Instead, it's a way of marking the environment so that the organism can sense where it's been, and not expend effort on searches that won't pay off. Although the situation isn't an exact parallel, the authors make a comparison to the pheromone trails used by ants.    In After Life: The Strange Science Of Decay there’s a truly incredible sequence of gorgeously shot video showing how creeping slime mold solves mazes and performs other other amazing feats of computation. Take a look at what simple one celled organisms can do: The whole video is really well done and shockingly revelatory. It’s the story of decay, how atoms created during the Big Bang and through countless supernova explosions are continually rearranged an

5 0.53511775 1467 high scalability-2013-05-30-Google Finds NUMA Up to 20% Slower for Gmail and Websearch

Introduction: When you have a large population of servers you have both the opportunity and the incentive to perform interesting studies. Authors from Google and the University of California in  Optimizing Google’s Warehouse Scale Computers: The NUMA Experience  conducted such a study, taking a look at how jobs run on clusters of machines using a  NUMA  architecture. Since NUMA is common on server class machines it's a topic of general interest for those looking to maximize machine utilization across clusters. Some of the results are surprising: The methodology of how to attribute such fine performance variations to NUMA effects within such a complex system is perhaps more interesting than the results themselves. Well worth reading just for that story. The performance swing due to NUMA is up to 15% on AMD Barcelona for Gmail backend and 20% on Intel Westmere for Web-search frontend.  Memory locality is not always King. Because of the interaction between NUMA and cache sharing/contention it

6 0.53091824 631 high scalability-2009-06-15-Large-scale Graph Computing at Google

7 0.51730525 692 high scalability-2009-09-01-Cheap storage: how backblaze takes matters in hand

8 0.51730525 1119 high scalability-2011-09-20-HighScalability is old news. Step your scaling game way up... (NSFW cartoon)

9 0.51299047 1392 high scalability-2013-01-23-Building Redundant Datacenter Networks is Not For Sissies - Use an Outside WAN Backbone

10 0.51216614 8 high scalability-2007-07-12-Should I use LAMP or Windows?

11 0.51078773 743 high scalability-2009-11-23-Big Data on Grids or on Clouds?

12 0.5041244 782 high scalability-2010-02-23-When to migrate your database?

13 0.50378752 443 high scalability-2008-11-14-Paper: Pig Latin: A Not-So-Foreign Language for Data Processing

14 0.50081003 401 high scalability-2008-10-04-Is MapReduce going mainstream?

15 0.49996465 1584 high scalability-2014-01-22-How would you build the next Internet? Loons, Drones, Copters, Satellites, or Something Else?

16 0.4936803 372 high scalability-2008-08-27-Updating distributed web applications

17 0.48889762 107 high scalability-2007-10-02-Some Real Financial Numbers for Your Startup

18 0.48193082 1100 high scalability-2011-08-18-Paper: The Akamai Network - 61,000 servers, 1,000 networks, 70 countries

19 0.46850267 1169 high scalability-2012-01-05-Shutterfly Saw a Speedup of 500% With Flashcache

20 0.46768236 1277 high scalability-2012-07-05-10 Golden Principles For Building Successful Mobile-Web Applications