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1600 high scalability-2014-02-21-Stuff The Internet Says On Scalability For February 21st, 2014


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Introduction: Hey, it's HighScalability time (a particularly bountiful week): The Telephone Wires of Manhattan in 1887 ( full ) $19 billion: you know what it is; $46 billion : cost of Sochi Olympics;   400 gigabytes : data transmitted during the Sochi opening ceremony; 26.9 million : Stack Overflow community monthly visitors;  93 million : Candy Crush  daily active users; 200-400 Gbps : The New Normal in DDoS Attacks Quotable Quotes: @brianacton : Facebook turned me down. It was a great opportunity to connect with some fantastic people. Looking forward to life's next adventure. @BenedictEvans : Flickr: $35m. Youtube: $1.65bn Whatsapp: $19bn. Mobile is big. And global. And the next computing platform. Paying attention? @taziden : On the Internet, worst cases will become common cases #fosdem #postfix Brian Hayes : Any quantum program must have a stovepipe architecture: Information flows straight through. So you think V


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1 DIDO, a low-latency high bandwidth wireless network technology that promises each wireless user to use the full data rate of shared spectrum simultaneously with all other users, by eliminating interference between users sharing the same spectrum. [sent-17, score-0.406]

2 Yes, quite possibly: Perlman’s pCell: The super-fast future of wireless networking, or too good to be true? [sent-20, score-0.119]

3 Small Data in Sports: Little Differences that Mean Big Outcomes: Strata 2014 : The gap between legendary and anonymity in sports is often less than a 1% performance difference in elite sports. [sent-27, score-0.138]

4 Thus, finding the core, modifiable variables that determine performance and tweaking them ever so slightly can alchemize silver medals into gold ones. [sent-28, score-0.15]

5 I think of type systems as a kind of the physics of a programming environment, encoding the physical laws of computation. [sent-31, score-0.21]

6 But I wonder of some of these laws don't apply to web projects where faster iteration, frequent deployment, and frequent addition of new design and features is the rule? [sent-36, score-0.21]

7 These energy savings are mainly driven by increased data center efficiency when using cloud services (email, calendars, and more). [sent-42, score-0.175]

8 Storage Mojo says it's plasmonics & metamaterials : Basically, metamaterials and plasmons enable new ways of writing and reading. [sent-67, score-0.282]

9 Some lessons: ECMP network designs are awesome; Cheap hardware changes the way you build networks; Cheap also means replaceable; Low Cost Got Business Attention; We bought some spare equipment because it was cheap; Features in the network are “missing”; Go multi-vendor. [sent-74, score-0.18]

10 They: create one index for every 10 million blogs, with 25 shards per index; We use index templates so that as our system tries to index to a non-existent index the index is created dynamically. [sent-105, score-0.485]

11 rcthompson : I'm reminded of a recent article that crossed the front page of HN, about a group writing some sort of fluid layout engine for their mobile app. [sent-126, score-0.132]

12 They were able to optimize it from tens of layouts to thousands of layout per second, which enabled their strategy of trying a bunch of different layouts and picking the best one. [sent-127, score-0.193]

13 Replication in networked games: Latency (Part 2) :  In this article we surveyed three different techniques for dealing with latency in networked games, though our review was by no means exhaustive. [sent-131, score-0.181]

14 : This article looks at methods of quantifying consistency (or lack thereof) in eventually consistent storage systems. [sent-135, score-0.135]

15 These methods are necessary for meaningful comparisons among different system configurations and workloads. [sent-136, score-0.121]

16 Building fast Bayesian computing machines out of intentionally stochastic, digital parts : The brain interprets ambiguous sensory information faster and more reliably than modern computers, using neurons that are slower and less reliable than logic gates. [sent-146, score-0.137]

17 But Bayesian inference, which underpins many computational models of perception and cognition, appears computationally challenging even given modern transistor speeds and energy budgets. [sent-147, score-0.219]

18 Here we show how to build fast Bayesian computing machines using intentionally stochastic, digital parts, narrowing this efficiency gap by multiple orders of magnitude. [sent-149, score-0.281]

19 We find that by connecting stochastic digital components according to simple mathematical rules, one can build massively parallel, low precision circuits that solve Bayesian inference problems and are compatible with the Poisson firing statistics of cortical neurons. [sent-150, score-0.337]

20 We evaluate circuits for depth and motion perception, perceptual learning and causal reasoning, each performing inference over 10,000+ latent variables in real time — a 1,000x speed advantage over commodity microprocessors. [sent-151, score-0.282]


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Introduction: Hey, it's HighScalability time (a particularly bountiful week): The Telephone Wires of Manhattan in 1887 ( full ) $19 billion: you know what it is; $46 billion : cost of Sochi Olympics;   400 gigabytes : data transmitted during the Sochi opening ceremony; 26.9 million : Stack Overflow community monthly visitors;  93 million : Candy Crush  daily active users; 200-400 Gbps : The New Normal in DDoS Attacks Quotable Quotes: @brianacton : Facebook turned me down. It was a great opportunity to connect with some fantastic people. Looking forward to life's next adventure. @BenedictEvans : Flickr: $35m. Youtube: $1.65bn Whatsapp: $19bn. Mobile is big. And global. And the next computing platform. Paying attention? @taziden : On the Internet, worst cases will become common cases #fosdem #postfix Brian Hayes : Any quantum program must have a stovepipe architecture: Information flows straight through. So you think V

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