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Join us on "Advantest Talks Semi" as we explore the critical importance of data management in the semiconductor industry with our guest, Joe Addiego.Joe Addiego is a seasoned operating executive and investor with over 20 years of operating experience in technology. His executive leadership contributed to two successful Initial Public Offerings (IPOs), showcasing his strategic acumen in guiding tech companies through critical growth phases. Joe's operational expertise spans across control systems, real-time operating systems, and software development tools, with expertise in data management, networking, and cybersecurity. Joe has spent the last 25 years as an investor, nurturing startups and establishing markets for innovative technologies holding prominent roles at In-Q-Tel, Alsop Louie Partners, and Brave Capital. As a lead investor for the real-time database company Aerospike, he addressed the data management industry's need for guaranteed low latency and low cost of ownership. More recent investments include Crunchy Data, an open-source PostgreSQL company that provides a trusted Postgres implementation for enterprises to use either on premises through Kubernetes, or in the cloud as a managed service. Crunchy Data recently augmented its cloud implementation to include a next-generation Postgres-native data warehouse, enabling everyone to take advantage of high-performance data analytics without leaving Postgres. Throughout Joe's career he has succeeded at creating new markets for innovative technologies. In this episode, we dive deep into how data serves as the foundation of cutting-edge innovations across AI, machine learning, adaptive testing, and cybersecurity. This conversation leads us into a comprehensive look at the evolution of data management—from the early days of punch cards and magnetic tapes to today's sophisticated database systems and cloud solutions.Throughout the episode, Joe shares his insights on the transformation brought about by the internet era, which has revolutionized how we store, manage, and leverage data in real-time across the globe. We'll examine how these advancements have fueled the explosion of data volumes and how modern technologies have adapted to handle this surge with unprecedented efficiency and security.Tune in to "Advantest Talks Semi" for a thought-provoking discussion on the history, current trends, and the future of data management within the semiconductor industry, and gain valuable perspectives on navigating the complexities of today's data-driven world. This episode is essential for anyone interested in the intersection of technology and business strategy, providing a clear understanding of how data continues to drive innovation and success in the high-tech landscape.Thanks for tuning in to "Advantest Talks Semi"! If you enjoyed this episode, we'd love to hear from you! Please take a moment to leave a rating on Apple Podcast. Your feedback helps us improve and reach new listeners. Don't forget to subscribe and share with your friends. We appreciate your support!
Un moteur fusée dans tuyère....
PayPal's Honey browser plugin is in deep water this week after YouTuber MegaLag exposed many layers of what sure feels like a scam. We've got a few other tech news stories this week, like the fact that you can call ChatGPT on the phone now; how exciting. Plus, we've got some tips and picks to help you start the new year strong! Watch on YouTube! INTRO (00:00) CES next week (03:10) Apple TV+ announces free streaming weekend for its catalog of originals (04:25) MAIN TOPIC: Honey, I shrunk your bank account (05:35) MegaLag - Exposing the Honey Influencer Scam Honey controversy, explained: Why a YouTuber claims coupon-finder is 'exploiting' influencers DAVE'S PRO-TIP OF THE WEEK: Set Apple Notes to locked (16:10) JUST THE HEADLINES: (27:20) New research shows AI strategically lying Could a sponge made from squid bones help remove microplastics? LEAP 71 hot fires advanced Aerospike rocket engine designed by computational AI Encyclopedia Britannica is now an AI company Scientists observe 'negative time' in quantum experiments Massive Volkswagen data leak exposed 800,000 EV owners' movements Drinking tea and coffee linked to lower risk of head and neck cancer in study TAKES: OpenAI makes ChatGPT available for phone calls and texts (31:35) App Store has hundreds of ‘risky' apps rated as appropriate for kids (36:15) The 7 Coolest Mathematical Discoveries of 2024 (39:15) Massive Marriott and Starwood data breaches require 13 fixes, says the FTC (43:25) BONUS ODD TAKE: The Microscope Museum (44:40) PICKS OF THE WEEK: Dave: Hogwarts Legacy (46:50) Nate: Beast Games on Amazon Prime (50:35) RAMAZON PURCHASE - Giveaway! (56:35)
When Stacey Kruczek joined Aerospike.com, their community building needed a little TLC from a developer relations expert. These days, the community is 12,000 people strong, the meetups are thriving and she knows exactly how to prove DevRel's business value. In this episode, we chat with Stacey about all of this and more. If there's one word to describe Stacey, it's passionate. This is obvious from the way she has built an immense amount of trust with developers at Aerospike and beyond. Aerospike is a real time database handling massive amounts of data, and Stacey has been key to building the wonderful community they currently uphold. Of course DevRel is a complicated role, but as Stacey puts it, she's really there to listen - and that's what she does, responding in real time to developer needs. Stacey is also doing incredible work with the Developer Relations Foundation, where she's on a mission to be the spokesperson that DevRel desperately needs. The foundation's focus is on promoting the value DevRel adds to business, and supporting their community in that goal. The work that Stacey does is not only huge in its amount but huge in its reach, and we can't wait to see what more she does in the future! Reach out to Stacey here: https://www.linkedin.com/in/staceykruczek/ Check out Aerospike here: https://aerospike.com/ Find out more and listen to previous podcasts here: https://www.voxgig.com/podcast Subscribe to our newsletter for weekly updates and information about upcoming meetups: https://voxgig.substack.com/ Join the Dublin DevRel Meetup group here: www.devrelmeetup.com
In this episode, SD Times editor-in-chief David Rubinstein interviews Stacey Kruczek, director of developer relations at Aerospike and steering committee member of the Developer Relations Foundation.They talk about why developer relations is important, including why the Developer Relations Foundation was formed.Key talking points:What a DevRel doesHow developer relations elevates the role of developersThe future of developer relationsTranscript: https://sdtimes.com/softwaredev/qa-why-the-developer-relations-foundation-is-forming/
In this curated episode of the Revenue Builders Podcast, John McMahon and John Kaplan are joined by sales veteran Tammy Sexton, currently CRO at Aerospike, discussing the crucial transition from being an account executive to a first-line manager. Tammy emphasizes the common pitfall of new managers acting as 'super reps' by trying to sell in their style rather than coaching their teams. She shares insights on empowering sales reps, recognizing individual strengths, and fostering lasting behavioral changes through effective coaching. The conversation highlights the importance of not overshadowing AEs in client interactions and allowing them to enjoy the critical negotiation phases. Tammy provides strategies to help new managers succeed in their roles and drive revenue goals without undermining their team's potential.KEY TAKEAWAYS[00:00:45] Transitioning from AE to First Line Manager[00:01:26] Avoiding the Super Rep Trap[00:03:46] Effective Coaching Strategies[00:04:11] Empowering Your TeamHIGHLIGHT QUOTES[00:01:43] "Managers need to recognize when they're becoming super rep and when they're doing their AEs' job for them, as opposed to coaching them."[00:01:59] "Sometimes letting them just fall off once is not a bad thing either."[00:03:50] "Telling them what to do is never really effective. Asking them questions so that they figure out that they could be doing something differently themselves - that's when you're going to actually have a change that's going to be a lasting change in their behavior."[00:04:21] "The most important person at the account is the rep and you're disrespecting the rep in front of the customer, you're not giving any power to the AE."[00:05:09] "Taking that fun part away from them makes them not want to be on your team anymore."Listen to the full episode through this link: https://revenue-builders.simplecast.com/episodes/showing-value-as-a-sales-leader-with-tammy-sexton/Enjoying the podcast? Sign up to receive new episodes straight to your inbox: https://hubs.li/Q02R10xN0Check out John McMahon's book here:Amazon Link: https://a.co/d/1K7DDC4Check out Force Management's Ascender platform here: https://my.ascender.co/Ascender/Read Force Management's eBook: https://www.forcemanagement.com/roi-of-sales-messaging
In the vast ocean of technological advancements, some individuals stand out as pioneers, charting new territories and building foundations for the future. Srini V. Srinivasan, the co-founder of Aerospike, is one such visionary whose journey unfolds like a captivating tale of perseverance, innovation, and adaptability.
Orchestrate all the Things podcast: Connecting the Dots with George Anadiotis
“Graph database growth is going strong through the Trough of Disillusionment.” And “Graph Analytics go big and real-time.” These were two of the headlines of the Spring 2023 update of the Year of the Graph newsletter. In combination, they seem like an appropriate summary of the reasoning behind a new entry in the graph database market: Aerospike Graph, which Aerospike officially unveiled in June 2023. We caught up with the company's Chief Product Officer Lenley Hensarling to discuss this long journey that started about three years ago, as well as Aerospike's differentiation in a very densely populated market. Article published on Orchestrate all the Things.
Gil Allouche is the Co-founder and CEO of Metadata, a company with patented technology that combines predictive scoring and programmatic advertising to deliver a predictable pipeline of opt-in lead-qualified leads for B2B enterprises. Metadata's customers include Cisco, UserVoice, Mulesoft, Salesforce, Infoblox, and Aerospike. Gil is a software engineer turned data-driven growth marketer who founded the company to make demand generation easy for non-technical marketers. In this episode… As a B2B marketer, are you trying to free yourself from mundane tasks so you can focus on doing the work that matters the most? How can you do so and spend more time on the big things like strategy, creativity, and driving revenue? After doing marketing for three B2B companies, Gil Allouche discovered he was dealing with too many manual and repetitive tasks. As a software engineer turned data-driven growth marketer, he started looking for ways to drive more revenue without getting bogged down by all the manual work. He shares his journey of building a platform to automate repetitive marketing tasks to give marketers time to focus on revenue-generating activities. In this inspiring episode of the Inspired Insider Podcast, Dr. Jeremy Weisz welcomes Gil Allouche, Co-founder and CEO of Metadata, to discuss ways to automate your marketing. Gil talks about Metadata and what it does, the evolution of its product, customer success stories, and its ideal client profile.
Stay competitive and relevant are two of the biggest factors that companies are striving for. Amid all these technological transformations, unlike all other sectors, Financial Services technology is also currently in the midst of a profound transformation, as CIOs and their teams prepare to embrace the next major phase of digital transformation. The challenge they face is significant: in a competitive environment of rising cost pressures, where rapid action and response are imperative, financial institutions must modernise their technology function to support expanded digitization of both the front and back ends of their businesses. Catch this 20-minute of conversation between our host Sukriti Yaduwanshi and Aveekshith Bushan, Vice President – Asia Pacific & Japan from Aerospike. #TechGig #Podcast #FinancialServices #DigitalTransformation #Digitization #Technology #TechCommunity
AWS launches $100M program to fund generative AI initiatives Smaller firms aim to consolidate security tools Schneider power meter vulnerability opens door to power outages Satellite-based laser communication: A rival to fibre networks? USB drives spread spyware as China's Mustang Panda APT goes global Lenley Hensarling, Chief Product Officer of Aerospike talks about helping businesses process real-time data in today's fast-paced environment. Hosts: Louis Maresca, Brian Chee, and Curtis Franklin Guest: Lenley Hensarling Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-enterprise-tech. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: Melissa.com/twit Miro.com/podcast
AWS launches $100M program to fund generative AI initiatives Smaller firms aim to consolidate security tools Schneider power meter vulnerability opens door to power outages Satellite-based laser communication: A rival to fibre networks? USB drives spread spyware as China's Mustang Panda APT goes global Lenley Hensarling, Chief Product Officer of Aerospike talks about helping businesses process real-time data in today's fast-paced environment. Hosts: Louis Maresca, Brian Chee, and Curtis Franklin Guest: Lenley Hensarling Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-enterprise-tech. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: Melissa.com/twit Miro.com/podcast
AWS launches $100M program to fund generative AI initiatives Smaller firms aim to consolidate security tools Schneider power meter vulnerability opens door to power outages Satellite-based laser communication: A rival to fibre networks? USB drives spread spyware as China's Mustang Panda APT goes global Lenley Hensarling, Chief Product Officer of Aerospike talks about helping businesses process real-time data in today's fast-paced environment. Hosts: Louis Maresca, Brian Chee, and Curtis Franklin Guest: Lenley Hensarling Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-enterprise-tech. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: Melissa.com/twit Miro.com/podcast
AWS launches $100M program to fund generative AI initiatives Smaller firms aim to consolidate security tools Schneider power meter vulnerability opens door to power outages Satellite-based laser communication: A rival to fibre networks? USB drives spread spyware as China's Mustang Panda APT goes global Lenley Hensarling, Chief Product Officer of Aerospike talks about helping businesses process real-time data in today's fast-paced environment. Hosts: Louis Maresca, Brian Chee, and Curtis Franklin Guest: Lenley Hensarling Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-enterprise-tech. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: Melissa.com/twit Miro.com/podcast
Srini Srinivasan grew up in India, during a time when you could go do whatever you wanted during the summer. So he explored and experienced many things, tech and non-tech. He was very into sports and competition, and wanted to be a cricket super star. He didn't start coding until he went off to college, and interestingly enough, there were many startups formed from his class. In the early days, he really loved the Assembly language (which I can attest is not the norm!).Srini was working in a company focused on mobile and adtech related work. During this time, he discovered that all database tech existing were lacking. He and his co-founder decided that they were the right pair to build a better system.This is the creation story of Aerospike.SponsorsCipherstashTreblleCAST AI FireflyTursoMemberstackLinksWebsite: https://aerospike.com/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/drvsrini/Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/code-story/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
In this episode of Tech Talks Daily, I explore the world of data with Martin James, the VP of EMEA at Aerospike, a company specializing in real-time data management serving major players like Yahoo, Wayfair, and Experian. Martin, known for his unique perspective on the colossal growth of global data and its effective management, takes us through his journey in the data landscape and the important role it plays in sectors such as ad-tech. Join us as we explore the rise in data usage, its implications for enterprises, and how they can maximize their data utility. Martin sheds light on the significance of data platforms in delivering real-time processing to power globally distributed applications. As a horse enthusiast, Martin also shares some interesting insights drawn from his love for horses and the parallels he sees with data management. Together, we dissect the impact of technology, revenue generation, cost reduction, and regulatory compliance on the data explosion. Hear Martin's unique take on how Aerospike's no-SQL database helps organizations manage voluminous data with lean hardware requirements, meeting the demands of modern application development. This episode takes a deep dive into the challenges and opportunities presented by data in the ad-tech industry, the role of real-time data management platforms, and the future of data management with the emergence of generative AI, 5G, and IoT. Whether you're a data enthusiast or a professional looking to harness the power of data, this episode offers valuable insights into the future of data management, the importance of scalable and flexible data platforms, and the need for actionable data.
SaaS Scaled - Interviews about SaaS Startups, Analytics, & Operations
In today's episode, we're talking to Lenley Hensarling, Chief Product Officer at Aerospike, Inc. Aerospike is a real-time data platform that allows users to act in real time across billions of transactions while reducing their server footprint.We talk about:- Lenley's background and the problems Aerospike solves.- The particular domains and industries that benefit from this kind of technology.- How the cloud has impacted what Aerospike does.- Why some people might choose on-premise over the cloud.- Finding the balance between customer-centric and market-centric.- Balancing product management with tasks like customer interaction and engineering.Lenley Hensarling - https://www.linkedin.com/in/lenleyhensarling/Aerospike - https://www.linkedin.com/company/aerospike-inc-/This episode is brought to you by QrveyThe tools you need to take action with your data, on a platform built for maximum scalability, security, and cost efficiencies. If you're ready to reduce complexity and dramatically lower costs, contact us today at qrvey.com.Qrvey, the modern no-code analytics solution for SaaS companies on AWS.#saas #analytics #AWS #BI
Businesses are rapidly having to contend with responding to the climate crisis, and the tech industry is set to become one of the biggest contributors to energy drain by the end of the decade. It is clear that sustainable software options are a goal, but many firms are reluctant to adopt lower-carbon systems out of concern for loss of power.Joining us this week is Behrad Babaee, Technology Evangelist at Aerospike, to talk about his proposals for a universal metric with which to measure the carbon output of software, and how it is possible to cut cost, latency and carbon emissions at the same time.
Aerospike Founder Srini Srinivasan had just finished his Ph.D. at the University of Wisconsin when he joined IBM and worked under Don Haderle, the creator of DB2, the first commercial relational database management system. Haderle became a major influencer on Srinivasan when he started Aerospike, a real-time data platform. To this day, Haderle is an advisor to Aerospike. "He was the first one I went back to for advice as to how to succeed," Srinivasan said in the most recent episode of The New Stack Maker series, "The Tech Founder Odyssey." A young, ambitious engineer, Srinivasan left IBM to join a startup. Impatient with the pace he considered slow, Srinivasan met with Haderle, who told him to go, challenge himself, and try new things that might be uncomfortable. Today, Srinivasan seeks a balance between research and product development, similar to the approach at IBM that he learned -- the balance between what is very hard and what's impossible. Technical startup founders find themselves with complex technical problems all the time. Srinivasan talked about inspiration to solve those problems, but what does inspiration mean at all? Inspiration is a complex topic to parse. It can be thought of as almost trivial or superficial to discuss. Srinivasan said inspiration becomes relevant when it is part of the work and how one honestly faces that work. Inspiration is honesty. "Because once one is honest, you're able to get the trust of the people you're working with," Srinivasan said. "So honesty leads to trust. Once you have trust, I think there can be a collaboration because now people don't have to worry about watching their back. You can make mistakes, and then you know that it's a trusted group of people. And they will, you know, watch your back. And then, with a team like that, you can now set goals that seem impossible. But with the combination of honesty and trust and collaboration, you can lead the team to essentially solve those hard problems. And in some cases, you have to be honest enough to realize that you don't have all the skills required to solve the problem, and you should be willing to go out and get somebody new to help you with that." Srinivasan uses the principles of honesty in Aerospike's software development. How does that manifest in the work Aerospike does? It leads to all kinds of insights about Unix, Linux, systems technologies, and everything built on top of the infrastructure. And that's the work Srinivasan enjoys so much – building foundational technology that may take years to build but over time, establishes the work that's important, scalable, and has great performance.
Site reliability engineering Site Reliability Engineering, also popularly referred to as the SRE, is a role in Computer Science Engineering where the main purpose is to provision, maintain, monitor, and manage the infrastructure in order to provide maximum application uptime and reliability. SRE is an emerging role, but the tasks that the SRE does were always there ever since the first application that was developed. The scope of the software developers ends where they write code to develop the application and right from setting up the infrastructure, the various services that run on them, the network connectivity that is required, providing a platform for the application to run and making sure every part of the application is up and running reliably 24x7 is the duty of an SRE. In fact, we can consider Site Reliability Engineers are the strong bridge between the users and a reliable application. Now, in order to explain the different responsibilities of an SRE, I have divided it into 4 different categories. I have always seen SRE this way, and definitely not as some ad-hoc process. The four categories in which I would classify the tasks of a Site Reliability Engineer are: Create Monitor Manage Destroy Let's dive deep into each one of them. Create 1. Provision virtual machines / PXE Baremetals SREs are responsible for provisioning the virtual machines with the requested resources in terms of CPU, memory, disks, network configurations, and operating system. They are also responsible to be rack aware during provisioning. Example operating systems involve Linux Ubuntu, CentOS, Windows. 2. Setup services Example technologies involve NGINX, Apache, RabbitMQ, Kafka, Hadoop, Traefik, MySQL, PostgreSQL, Aerospike, MongoDB, Redis, MinIO, Kubernetes, Apache Mesos, Marathon, MariaDB, Galera. 3. Optimize the infrastructure Since there are several components and services that are being used in the infrastructure, there is a scope for improvements in terms of performance, efficiency, and security. The SRE optimizes the components by keeping them up to date, choosing the right service for the right job, patching the servers. 4. Write monitoring scripts When the SRE are involved in maintaining an infrastructure of any size, they never underestimate any component of the infrastructure and write a monitoring script to monitor the components and metrics of each and every one of them. This provides the ability to get real-time alerts on any of the components malfunctioning and also a better view of the infrastructure. The SRE uses programming languages like Bash, Python, Golang, Perl, and tools like daemon processes, Riemann, InfluxDB, OpenTSDB, Kafka, Grafana, Prometheus, and APIs to monitor the infrastructure 5. Write automation scripts If there are more than 10 steps to be performed and chances are that the task has to be performed more than once, the SRE never hesitate to automate the task. This saves time and also prevents human error. The SRE uses programming languages like Bash, Python, Golang, Perl, Ansible to automate the tasks. 6. Manage users on the machines
Site reliability engineering Site Reliability Engineering, also popularly referred to as the SRE, is a role in Computer Science Engineering where the main purpose is to provision, maintain, monitor, and manage the infrastructure in order to provide maximum application uptime and reliability. SRE is an emerging role, but the tasks that the SRE does were always there ever since the first application that was developed. The scope of the software developers ends where they write code to develop the application and right from setting up the infrastructure, the various services that run on them, the network connectivity that is required, providing a platform for the application to run and making sure every part of the application is up and running reliably 24x7 is the duty of an SRE. In fact, we can consider Site Reliability Engineers are the strong bridge between the users and a reliable application. Now, in order to explain the different responsibilities of an SRE, I have divided it into 4 different categories. I have always seen SRE this way, and definitely not as some ad-hoc process. The four categories in which I would classify the tasks of a Site Reliability Engineer are: Create Monitor Manage Destroy Let's dive deep into each one of them. Create 1. Provision virtual machines / PXE Baremetals SREs are responsible for provisioning the virtual machines with the requested resources in terms of CPU, memory, disks, network configurations, and operating system. They are also responsible to be rack aware during provisioning. Example operating systems involve Linux Ubuntu, CentOS, Windows. 2. Setup services Example technologies involve NGINX, Apache, RabbitMQ, Kafka, Hadoop, Traefik, MySQL, PostgreSQL, Aerospike, MongoDB, Redis, MinIO, Kubernetes, Apache Mesos, Marathon, MariaDB, Galera. 3. Optimize the infrastructure Since there are several components and services that are being used in the infrastructure, there is a scope for improvements in terms of performance, efficiency, and security. The SRE optimizes the components by keeping them up to date, choosing the right service for the right job, patching the servers. 4. Write monitoring scripts When the SRE are involved in maintaining an infrastructure of any size, they never underestimate any component of the infrastructure and write a monitoring script to monitor the components and metrics of each and every one of them. This provides the ability to get real-time alerts on any of the components malfunctioning and also a better view of the infrastructure. The SRE uses programming languages like Bash, Python, Golang, Perl, and tools like daemon processes, Riemann, InfluxDB, OpenTSDB, Kafka, Grafana, Prometheus, and APIs to monitor the infrastructure 5. Write automation scripts If there are more than 10 steps to be performed and chances are that the task has to be performed more than once, the SRE never hesitate to automate the task. This saves time and also prevents human error. The SRE uses programming languages like Bash, Python, Golang, Perl, Ansible to automate the tasks. 6. Manage users on the machines
Site reliability engineering Site Reliability Engineering, also popularly referred to as the SRE, is a role in Computer Science Engineering where the main purpose is to provision, maintain, monitor, and manage the infrastructure in order to provide maximum application uptime and reliability. SRE is an emerging role, but the tasks that the SRE does were always there ever since the first application that was developed. The scope of the software developers ends where they write code to develop the application and right from setting up the infrastructure, the various services that run on them, the network connectivity that is required, providing a platform for the application to run and making sure every part of the application is up and running reliably 24x7 is the duty of an SRE. In fact, we can consider Site Reliability Engineers are the strong bridge between the users and a reliable application. Now, in order to explain the different responsibilities of an SRE, I have divided it into 4 different categories. I have always seen SRE this way, and definitely not as some ad-hoc process. The four categories in which I would classify the tasks of a Site Reliability Engineer are: Create Monitor Manage Destroy Let's dive deep into each one of them. Create 1. Provision virtual machines / PXE Baremetals SREs are responsible for provisioning the virtual machines with the requested resources in terms of CPU, memory, disks, network configurations, and operating system. They are also responsible to be rack aware during provisioning. Example operating systems involve Linux Ubuntu, CentOS, Windows. 2. Setup services Example technologies involve NGINX, Apache, RabbitMQ, Kafka, Hadoop, Traefik, MySQL, PostgreSQL, Aerospike, MongoDB, Redis, MinIO, Kubernetes, Apache Mesos, Marathon, MariaDB, Galera. 3. Optimize the infrastructure Since there are several components and services that are being used in the infrastructure, there is a scope for improvements in terms of performance, efficiency, and security. The SRE optimizes the components by keeping them up to date, choosing the right service for the right job, patching the servers. 4. Write monitoring scripts When the SRE are involved in maintaining an infrastructure of any size, they never underestimate any component of the infrastructure and write a monitoring script to monitor the components and metrics of each and every one of them. This provides the ability to get real-time alerts on any of the components malfunctioning and also a better view of the infrastructure. The SRE uses programming languages like Bash, Python, Golang, Perl, and tools like daemon processes, Riemann, InfluxDB, OpenTSDB, Kafka, Grafana, Prometheus, and APIs to monitor the infrastructure 5. Write automation scripts If there are more than 10 steps to be performed and chances are that the task has to be performed more than once, the SRE never hesitate to automate the task. This saves time and also prevents human error. The SRE uses programming languages like Bash, Python, Golang, Perl, Ansible to automate the tasks. 6. Manage users on the machines
Site reliability engineering Site Reliability Engineering, also popularly referred to as the SRE, is a role in Computer Science Engineering where the main purpose is to provision, maintain, monitor, and manage the infrastructure in order to provide maximum application uptime and reliability. SRE is an emerging role, but the tasks that the SRE does were always there ever since the first application that was developed. The scope of the software developers ends where they write code to develop the application and right from setting up the infrastructure, the various services that run on them, the network connectivity that is required, providing a platform for the application to run and making sure every part of the application is up and running reliably 24x7 is the duty of an SRE. In fact, we can consider Site Reliability Engineers are the strong bridge between the users and a reliable application. Now, in order to explain the different responsibilities of an SRE, I have divided it into 4 different categories. I have always seen SRE this way, and definitely not as some ad-hoc process. The four categories in which I would classify the tasks of a Site Reliability Engineer are: Create Monitor Manage Destroy Let's dive deep into each one of them. Create 1. Provision virtual machines / PXE Baremetals SREs are responsible for provisioning the virtual machines with the requested resources in terms of CPU, memory, disks, network configurations, and operating system. They are also responsible to be rack aware during provisioning. Example operating systems involve Linux Ubuntu, CentOS, Windows. 2. Setup services Example technologies involve NGINX, Apache, RabbitMQ, Kafka, Hadoop, Traefik, MySQL, PostgreSQL, Aerospike, MongoDB, Redis, MinIO, Kubernetes, Apache Mesos, Marathon, MariaDB, Galera. 3. Optimize the infrastructure Since there are several components and services that are being used in the infrastructure, there is a scope for improvements in terms of performance, efficiency, and security. The SRE optimizes the components by keeping them up to date, choosing the right service for the right job, patching the servers. 4. Write monitoring scripts When the SRE are involved in maintaining an infrastructure of any size, they never underestimate any component of the infrastructure and write a monitoring script to monitor the components and metrics of each and every one of them. This provides the ability to get real-time alerts on any of the components malfunctioning and also a better view of the infrastructure. The SRE uses programming languages like Bash, Python, Golang, Perl, and tools like daemon processes, Riemann, InfluxDB, OpenTSDB, Kafka, Grafana, Prometheus, and APIs to monitor the infrastructure 5. Write automation scripts If there are more than 10 steps to be performed and chances are that the task has to be performed more than once, the SRE never hesitate to automate the task. This saves time and also prevents human error. The SRE uses programming languages like Bash, Python, Golang, Perl, Ansible to automate the tasks. 6. Manage users on the machines
Site reliability engineering Site Reliability Engineering, also popularly referred to as the SRE, is a role in Computer Science Engineering where the main purpose is to provision, maintain, monitor, and manage the infrastructure in order to provide maximum application uptime and reliability. SRE is an emerging role, but the tasks that the SRE does were always there ever since the first application that was developed. The scope of the software developers ends where they write code to develop the application and right from setting up the infrastructure, the various services that run on them, the network connectivity that is required, providing a platform for the application to run and making sure every part of the application is up and running reliably 24x7 is the duty of an SRE. In fact, we can consider Site Reliability Engineers are the strong bridge between the users and a reliable application. Now, in order to explain the different responsibilities of an SRE, I have divided it into 4 different categories. I have always seen SRE this way, and definitely not as some ad-hoc process. The four categories in which I would classify the tasks of a Site Reliability Engineer are: Create Monitor Manage Destroy Let's dive deep into each one of them. Create 1. Provision virtual machines / PXE Baremetals SREs are responsible for provisioning the virtual machines with the requested resources in terms of CPU, memory, disks, network configurations, and operating system. They are also responsible to be rack aware during provisioning. Example operating systems involve Linux Ubuntu, CentOS, Windows. 2. Setup services Example technologies involve NGINX, Apache, RabbitMQ, Kafka, Hadoop, Traefik, MySQL, PostgreSQL, Aerospike, MongoDB, Redis, MinIO, Kubernetes, Apache Mesos, Marathon, MariaDB, Galera. 3. Optimize the infrastructure Since there are several components and services that are being used in the infrastructure, there is a scope for improvements in terms of performance, efficiency, and security. The SRE optimizes the components by keeping them up to date, choosing the right service for the right job, patching the servers. 4. Write monitoring scripts When the SRE are involved in maintaining an infrastructure of any size, they never underestimate any component of the infrastructure and write a monitoring script to monitor the components and metrics of each and every one of them. This provides the ability to get real-time alerts on any of the components malfunctioning and also a better view of the infrastructure. The SRE uses programming languages like Bash, Python, Golang, Perl, and tools like daemon processes, Riemann, InfluxDB, OpenTSDB, Kafka, Grafana, Prometheus, and APIs to monitor the infrastructure 5. Write automation scripts If there are more than 10 steps to be performed and chances are that the task has to be performed more than once, the SRE never hesitate to automate the task. This saves time and also prevents human error. The SRE uses programming languages like Bash, Python, Golang, Perl, Ansible to automate the tasks. 6. Manage users on the machines
Retrouvez la présentation du nouveau PC : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KTmiG... Commandez notre livre sur Amazon : https://amzn.to/2K1womp Ou sur la Fnac : https://tidd.ly/37JegpJ Soutenez la chaîne avec Tipeee: https://www.tipeee.com/hugo-lisoir Ou si vous préférez uTip : https://utip.io/feed/hugolisoir
Aerospike is a database engine that is designed to provide millisecond response times for queries across terabytes or petabytes. In this episode Chief Strategy Officer, Lenley Hensarling, explains how the ability to process these large volumes of information in real-time allows businesses to unlock entirely new capabilities. He also discusses the technical implementation that allows for such extreme performance and how the data model contributes to the scalability of the system. If you need to deal with massive data, at high velocities, in milliseconds, then Aerospike is definitely worth learning about.
I'm a technology Geek with over 20 years of experience in the world of databases. I'm eager to continuously learn and improve while removing obstacles out of the way. I'm keen to reach success and always strive to achieve a true win-win. I believe that doing business is “all about the people”, and finding the shared road to success. For 8 years, I worked for John Bryce and delivered technical database training for thousands of people globally, following that I founded my training and services boutique company and after 10 years I had the opportunity to kickstart the Aerospike Israel entity, which I've been leading since 2018.
One of the challenges with AI in financial services is explaining AI’s “black box,” which refers to the fact even developers are unable to provide visibility into an algorithm trained with machine learning (ML). This is one reason AI can include bias and run afoul of regulators. Explainable AI could change that, said Stuart Tarmy, global director of financial services industry solutions at Aerospike. Aerospike offers a NoSQL, or non-tabular, non-relational database that powers real-time networks such as PayPal, Visa and Schwab.
Anshu heads the SRE and engineering infrastructure (systems) operations for Grab Financial Group across SE Asia on AWS, Azure, GCP, AzureStack, and bare metal servers. Being the first member of the team and the first few engineering hires in Bangalore, he worked on greenfield project to establish engineering best practices using containers, cloud agnostics stack, IAAC, and CI/CD and grew the SRE team to 10 while helping to grow the engineering team to 200. Prior to joining Grab in 2017, Anshu worked with Freecharge, Jio, Aerospike, and Yahoo. Managing exponential scale 25:15 - Balancing innovation & growth 32:27 - How have Dev-Ops evolved? 41:20 - Being an engineering manager 53:14 - Nuances of the 0 to 1 Journey ---------------- Connect with Anshu - Linkedin - https://www.linkedin.com/in/anshuprateek/ ---------------- Check out The Daily Reader: www.tinyurl.com/wanttobeadailyreader ----------------- Found this episode informative? Let us know by hitting the like button & subscribing to our channel. You can also Tweet or DM us on - LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/company/startup-operator Twitter - https://twitter.com/OperatorStartup --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/startup-operator/message
The volume and velocity of data generated by government continues to grow at astronomic rates. At the same time, federal agencies have a lot of legacy applications that need to be re-factored to take advantage of modern architectures While government organizations continue to look for more effective ways to handle high-volume data management and analysis strategies, they can benefit from taking advantage of tools that have already been tried and tested within the private sector. John Dillon, CEO of Aerospike points to companies like Verizon Media, which uses Aerospike’s platform to handle large scale data correlations at a significantly lower cost compared to past platforms in this FedScoop podcast. Sponsored by by Aerospike. Guests: John Dillon, CEO and Srini Srinivasan, co-founder and chief product officer for Aerospike Host: Wyatt Kash, SVP, Content Strategy, Scoop News Group Look for more coverage of “IT Modernization in Government” on www.fedscoop.com/listen
В 16 выпуске подкаста Javaswag поговорили с Андреем Мизуровым о GameDeve на Java, протоколах Stomp, RSocket и о том, чем так хороша библиотека Netty 00:01:56 О себе, FoxPro, Квн, Налоговая 00:04:40 Как начать писать код если ты DBA? 00:06:25 До сих пор ли парсят XML на PL/SQL? Биллинг Сбера на Oracle 00:07:56 Хранимые процедуры, как микросервисы и хороший DBA, который все знает 00:09:02 Проблема архитектуры на хранимках - как обновлять код? 00:10:59 После энтерпрайза в GameDev 00:12:25 Дождаться пока все пользователи уйдут, чтобы задеплоить новую версию 00:15:07 Что удивило в ГеймДев после энтерпрайза? 00:17:09 Как начинается разработка игры? Откуда приходит идея, прототип? 00:19:19 Кто выбирает технологии, на которых будет написана игра? 00:20:15 Клиентские движки vs сервер 00:22:45 Ставим игру на “рельсы” - login-service, user-service, payment-сервис, bonus-service 00:25:45 Где хранятся игровые данные? MySql, Aerospike, Couchbase 00:30:17 Архитектура под игру 00:32:25 Пусть сообщения из SDK на бекенд 00:36:21 Spring Netflix stack: Zuul, Ribbon, Hystrix 00:39:59 Почему в Геймдеве популярна реактивщина? 00:48:23 ГеймДев и протоколы SmartFox 00:55:08 Протокол STOMP 01:00:51 RSocket 01:03:25 Что не так протоколом? 01:07:33 Netty 01:15:56 Netty 5 01:25:18 Couchbase, Aerospike Гость - github.com/amizurov
Subscribe | Transcript | Comment The Episode in 60 Seconds It's one thing to think you know your customer. It's another thing to create a marketing message that grows and changes as your customer does. In this edition of Studio CMO, we talk about: The privacy challenges of data gathering Has email marketing run its course? What is an MQL in our data-rich world? Programatic solutions for marketing messages How your understanding of the buyer's journey changes the data you gather and then is changed by what you gather Our Guest Bill Odell is the CMO of Aerospike who strives to build next-generation data systems for their customers. Bill has spent over 25 years in the trenches launching new products, building businesses, and leading high performance marketing organizations. He is passionate about helping educate customers on how to apply new technology solutions that help drive transformative business outcomes. Bill has held executive positions at Cisco, Dell Software and SonicWall as well as multiple category-creating growth stage B2B technology companies. Show Notes In 2012, researchers at Harvard said, "Data is the new oil." Bill Odell believes that realtime data is truly the new oil. Email marketing might be running its course because LinkedIn and social media are becoming more of the way that we engage with people. But how do you do it contextually and appropriately? — Bill Odell Privacy matters surrounding data gathering for companies with an online presence have become more complicated in the last two years. Find out how and when your company needs to comply with GDPR and CCPA with these articles: GDPR for B2B Tech: Sales and Marketing Tips You Need to Know Does CCPA Apply to B2B? What You Need to Know CCPA Penalties Target SaaS & Digital Marketing There is a standard Marketing Qualified Lead (MQL) methodology. If they do X plus Y plus Z, they're scored and we make a phone call, send them an email, or perhaps an InMail on LinkedIn. But what if you could also look at their activity off your site? That gives you a better signal. You can truly determine if the lead is worth your time. Because the truth of the matter is the number of MQLs—that should be your best leads that actually convert is still relatively low. So how do we get it to go higher? Use different kinds of data signals to try to figure out when's the right time to contact. That's a fundamental sea change in marketing. — Bill Odell Tools Discussed Bombora Demandbase Marketo Salesforce The Trade Desk Appnexus Wouldn't you rather put your ad in front of the right person at the right time and the right place. But underneath that is an engine that has to be able to deal with massive amounts of data. So as marketeers, as we think about choosing ad platforms, you've got to really understand that not all ad platforms are the same and you want to go with the ones that actually know how and can deal with massive amounts of data and can prove that they can target and deliver your ad at the right time at the right price to get the right yield. — Bill Odell What defines us, isn't our name and our title and our company, right? What defines us is a whole bunch of information, right? It's where we spend our time. What do we enjoy? What do we purchase? Where do we purchase things from? You know, the companies that are figuring this out, spend a tremendous amount of time, building a very comprehensive profile store. How well you can build the profile store on a bunch of attributes that go beyond name, title, and company. But how do you keep that contextual? Because we move around, we change, we age, we get married and we have kids. And so in order to do any kind of AI- or ML-driven application, it comes down to the data models and those data models are as good as the amount of data you can feed them and how fast you can refresh the models. — Bill Odell Data + profile store + frequency of changes + AI = best decision at the moment it matters Information About the Buyer's Journey Don’t Leave Your Users Behind: Mapping The B2B User Experience How To Optimize Your Messaging & Content for the B2B Buyer Journey Embracing The Digital Revolution: The New B2B Buyer Journey Understanding Your Customer The Buyer Matrix: Mapping Your B2B Tech Product Features to Market Problems The Buyer Matrix Doesn't Just Sell Features, It Solves Problems. Bring Your B2B Buyer Persona to Life: 8 Clues Learned from Studying Fiction How to Realize a Breakthrough in Content using "The Power of One" Case Studies from Aerospike
Databases are showing their age, still taking some time to get results. Aerospike, with the help of Intel technology (Optane), breaks through with speed, volume, and low latency. Tim Faulkes, Vice President of Solutions Architecture at Aerospike, joins Darren Pulsipher, Chief Solutions Architect, Intel, to discuss the benefits of Aerospike technology. Blog: https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/government/podcasts/embracing-digital-transformation-episode29.html Video: https://youtu.be/btMNND3AH7Q
I dette afsnit snakker Hasse og Lasse om endnu en update om OSIRIS REx, vand på månen og hvordan man sender en raket i rummet. Beholder på OSIRIS REx: Aerospikes raket motorer: https://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?topic=45686.0 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aerospike_engine#/media/File:Twin_Linear_Aerospike_XRS-2200_Engine_PLW_edit.jpg
This week on DisrupTV, we interviewed Don Tapscott, Co-Founder and Executive Chairman at Blockchain Research Institute & Author, Lenley Hensarling, Chief Strategy Officer at Aerospike and Stephane Roux & Pascal Steck, Co-Founders of Wonder. DisrupTV is a weekly Web series with hosts R “Ray” Wang and Vala Afshar. The show airs live at 11:00 a.m. PT/ 2:00 p.m. ET every Friday. Brought to you by Constellation Executive Network: constellationr.com/CEN.
В гостях Иван Присяжный из Scylla. Поговорили про такие базы как Sled, Aerospike, LMDB. Про языки Rust, Go, Java. Немножко про транзации и процы.
Мы говорили об вызовах написания рекламного серверсайда, Go, базах данных Aerospike, Postgres, Casandra, Druid и многом другом. Приходите к нам в https://bit.ly/3bpP7QL тут можно обсудить выпуски, задать вопросы ведущим и предложить темы для следующих выпусков. Если хотите прийти в гости пишите или оставить анонимный отзыв пишите сюда: @generictalks_bot
An obscure topic even among rocket scientists, the Linear Aerospike Engine is an incredible feat of engineering that needs to be recognized. So we're putting a spotlight on it for our pilot episode! Music from https://filmmusic.io "Tyrant" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com) License: CC BY (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Sources: Chaikin, Andrew. “Is SpaceX Changing the Rocket Equation?” Air & Space Magazine, Air & Space Magazine, 1 Jan. 2012, www.airspacemag.com/space/is-spacex…nd%20to%20orbit. Coniglio, Samuel, director. Aerospike Engine. YouTube, YouTube, www.youtube.com/watch?v=EWf4iOMSPNc. Curious Droid, director. Aerospike Engines - Why Aren't We Using Them Now? YouTube, YouTube, www.youtube.com/watch?v=K4zFefh5T-8. Dunbar, Brian. “X-33 Fact Sheet.” NASA, NASA, www.nasa.gov/centers/marshall/n…und/facts/x33.html. “End of an Era.” End of an Era | National Air and Space Museum, airandspace.si.edu/exhibitions/apo…/end-of-era.cfm. “Engineering The Future.” ARCA, www.arcaspace.com/. “Firefly Alpha.” Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation, 16 Dec. 2019, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firefly_Alpha. "Flight of the Aerospike: Episode 26 - Preliminary Calibration Tests for the Aerospike" Youtube video, October 2019, www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qo7JSiftPiM. J-2T-200K, www.astronautix.com/j/j-2t-200k.html. Lash, Elizabeth Lara, "Trajectory Analysis and Comparison of a Linear Aerospike Nozzle to a Conventional Bell Nozzle for SSTO Flight. " Master's Thesis, University of Tennessee, 2015. trace.tennessee.edu/utk_gradthes/3383 Mark Wade (17 November 2011). "J-2T-200K". Encyclopedia Astronautica. Retrieved 26 February 2012. Nasa.gov. (2020). NASA - Linear Aerospike Engine fact sheet (08/00). [online] Available at: www.nasa.gov/centers/marshall/n…cts/aerospike.html [Accessed 12 Oct. 2019]. “Reusable Launch Vehicle.” NASA, NASA, spinoff.nasa.gov/spinoff1996/14.html. Wikipedia contributors, "Aerospike engine," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?titl…&oldid=919434967 (accessed January 1, 2020).
Here's how a global expert at product management and business strategy is digitally transforming legal tech and global mobility Edwin Cohen, Author Editor Global Business, GLOBAL HR NEWS Broadcast Host, GLOBAL RADIO TALK SHOW Date: June 23, 2019 Meet Mr. Viraj Phanse- Product Management, Go-To-Market, Business Strategy; San Francisco Bay Area. Typically, immigration law firms and global mobility teams at leading corporations send documents such as retainer agreements, privacy policy documents, immigration documents to their clients for signatures via either email or physical mail. This process is not efficient and secure, and leads to a loss of millions of dollars globally. Viraj Phanse, an internationally recognized product management and business strategy expert at INSZoom.com, the leader in immigration case management space, saw these challenges and solved this problem through an original and innovative product that he conceptualized, built and launched globally, the INSZoom-DocuSign integration product. This landmark product has digitally transformed the immigration space and has made the e-signing process efficient for law firms and global mobility teams. This solution developed under the leadership of Viraj will not only save millions of dollars for the law firms and global mobility teams across the globe, but bring in about 95% more efficiency and at the same time more profitability and customer satisfaction as now paralegals and global mobility experts can focus on customers and prospects rather than worrying about getting the documents signed. Docusign-INSZoom integration is getting a lot of recognition. Even global executives and leaders could personally and professionally connect with the product and the value Viraj has brought in. As said by Darren Libby, Vice President at Docusign, “This is a great story of a new DocuSign Partner building a great integration with DocuSign eSignature. I used INSZoom myself for my L1 move from Canada to the US! Thanks Viraj Phanse from INSZoom and Scott Fisher from DocuSign, and everyone else involved!” Only an expert like Viraj can set up such an innovative partnership within just a few weeks with DocuSign, the gold standard for e-signature and get this product to market in just a couple of months. Viraj is globally recognized for his digital transformation expertise and this can be seen from his past professional achievements. At a startup called Aerospike, he helped launch real time charging and billing solutions through partnerships with leading global telecom players by devising an original OEM solution which involved embedding Aerospike database in these solutions and helped digitally transform the global telco space. This solution helped these telcos save millions of dollars and reduce latency in the digital transactions. Prior to that, he has led innovative projects at companies like Persistent Systems and built first of its kind products like data and cybersecurity solutions for enterprises. An expert at bigdata, analytics and cloud, he is the Rutgers BigData Advisory Board member. This invitation only board has top level global executives from companies like Salesforce, Tesla, IDEO, Microsoft, LinkedIn, Google, GM, Prudential Life, Verizon, Merck, TIG, Johnson & Johnson, and Morgan Stanley. These are individuals who are internationally renowned product and business experts in data and analytics who have a demonstrated record of outstanding achievements. This is an amazing segue into the other innovation by Viraj that has leveraged data and analytics to digitally transform the legal tech industry. He has led the development and launch of a datawarehouse as a managed service solution at INSZoom.com. This impactful product helps law firms and global mobility teams convert data into business assets and run reports that help increase the operational efficiency and provide insights ...
Brian Bulkowski, founder of Aerospike, joins Chip Chat to talk about how Aerospike is facilitating a new class of databases for Internet-scale customers. Aerospike is a database company that created a ground-up platform to support the larger datasets and operational databases driven by use cases like retail catalogs, fraud detection, and telecommunications. In this interview, Bulkowski discusses how Aerospike is working to support customers generating terabytes of data from billions of transactions every day and shares his thoughts on Intel® Optane™ DC persistent memory, which Aerospike has found to reduce the restart time for an 8.7 TB database by up to 135x[1]. For more information on Aerospike, please visit aerospike.com. [1] Tests performed by Intel and Aerospike as of 27 February 2019 demonstrated that an 8.7 TB database could be restarted in as little as 35 seconds on a server configured with DRAM + Intel® Optane™ DC persistent memory versus up to 4,745 seconds (1 hr 19 m 5 s) on a server configured with an equivalent amount of DRAM-only memory, for details see https://intel.ly/2vFT5m5. All information provided here is subject to change without notice. Contact your Intel representative to obtain the latest Intel product specifications and roadmaps. Intel processors of the same SKU may vary in frequency or power as a result of natural variability in the production process. For more information about performance and benchmark data, visit www.intel.com/benchmarks. Intel does not control or audit third-party benchmark data or the web sites referenced in this document. You should visit the referenced web site and confirm whether referenced data are accurate. Performance results are based on testing and may not reflect all publicly available security updates. See configuration disclosure for details. No product can be absolutely secure. Software and workloads used in performance tests may have been optimized for performance only on Intel microprocessors. Performance tests, such as SYSmark and MobileMark, are measured using specific computer systems, components, software, operations and functions. Any change to any of those factors may cause the results to vary. You should consult other information and performance tests to assist you in fully evaluating your contemplated purchases, including the performance of that product when combined with other products. Optimization Notice: Optimization Notice: Intel's compilers may or may not optimize to the same degree for non-Intel microprocessors for optimizations that are not unique to Intel microprocessors. These optimizations include SSE2, SSE3, and SSSE3 instruction sets and other optimizations. Intel does not guarantee the availability, functionality, or effectiveness of any optimization on microprocessors not manufactured by Intel. Microprocessor-dependent optimizations in this product are intended for use with Intel microprocessors. Certain optimizations not specific to Intel microarchitecture are reserved for Intel microprocessors. Please refer to the applicable product User and Reference Guides for more information regarding the specific instruction sets covered by this notice. Notice Revision #20110804 Intel disclaims all express and implied warranties, including without limitation, the implied warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, and non-infringement, as well as any warranty arising from course of performance, course of dealing, or usage in trade. This interview contains information on products, services, and or processes in development. All information provided here is subject to change without notice. Contact your Intel representative to obtain the latest forecast, schedule, specifications, and roadmaps. The products and services described may contain defects or errors known as errata which may cause deviations from published specifications. Current characterized errata are available on request.
In this episode we discuss high performance databases and the storage needed to get there, with Brian Bulkowski, Founder and CTO of Aerospike. Howard met Brian at an Intel Optane event last summer and thought he'd be a good person to talk with. I couldn't agree more. Howard and I both thought Aerospike was an … Continue reading "77: GreyBeards talk high performance databases with Brian Bulkowski, Founder & CTO, Aerospike"
In this episode we discuss high performance databases and the storage needed to get there, with Brian Bulkowski, Founder and CTO of Aerospike. Howard met Brian at an Intel Optane event last summer and thought he’d be a good person to talk with. I couldn’t agree more. Howard and I both thought Aerospike was an … Continue reading "77: GreyBeards talk high performance databases with Brian Bulkowski, Founder & CTO, Aerospike"
Thanks to everyone that's subscribed to the podcast. If you could do me a favor and leave a review for the podcast, I'd appreciate it! If you take a screenshot of your review and send it to @johnmulnix, pretty much anywhere on the Internet, I will send you a Space Shot sticker and a thank you! Connect with me on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter, just click the links below. Facebook (https://m.facebook.com/thespaceshot/) Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/johnmulnix/) Twitter (https://twitter.com/johnmulnix) Episode Links: SR-71 Blackbird- NASA (https://www.nasa.gov/centers/armstrong/news/FactSheets/FS-030-DFRC.html) Creating The Blackbird- Lockheed Martin (https://www.lockheedmartin.com/us/100years/stories/blackbird.html) I forgot to mention this in the podcast, I'm going to do an episode on Aerospike engines in the future. This one was tested on a SR-71. Linear Aerospike SR-71 Experiment (LASRE) (https://www.nasa.gov/centers/dryden/history/pastprojects/SR71/Lasre/index.html) HL-10 Lifting Body- NASA (https://www.nasa.gov/centers/dryden/multimedia/imagegallery/HL-10/ECN-2064.html) NASA Armstrong Fact Sheet: HL-10 Lifting Body (https://www.nasa.gov/centers/armstrong/news/FactSheets/FS-010-DFRC.html) NASA selects comet and Titan missions as New Frontiers finalists- Jeff Foust, SpaceNews.com (http://spacenews.com/nasa-selects-comet-and-titan-missions-as-new-frontiers-finalists/)
Sprinklr delivers a complete social media management system for the enterprise. It also helps the world's largest brands do marketing, advertising, care, sales, research, and commerce on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and 21 other channels on a global level. This is all done on a single integrated platform. In this session, you learn about Sprinklr's journey to the cloud and discover how to optimize your NoSQL database on AWS for cost, efficiency, and scale. We also do dive deep into best practices and architectural considerations for designing and managing NoSQL databases, such as Apache Cassandra, MongoDB, Apache CouchDB, and Aerospike on Amazon EC2 and Amazon EBS. We share best practices for instance and volume selection, provide performance tuning hints, and describe cost optimization techniques throughout.
Satish Iyer, VP of Marketing at Aerospike, joins Intel Chip Chat to discuss how Aerospike worked closely with Intel to ensure that their Hybrid Memory Database was able to take advantage of the performance of the new Intel® Xeon® Scalable processors. Aerospike achieved a throughput of 8.8 million transactions per second by refreshing their systems with Intel Xeon Scalable processors and enhancing their software with new capabilities like auto-tuning. Satish talks about why it is so important for their database to have predictable performance and for their customers to have high availability and uptime, which is something Aerospike is well-known for. To learn more about Aerospike and how their software benefits “out of the box” from the Intel Xeon Scalable platform, visit www.aerospike.com, or check out our blog http://intel.ly/2mt7ksr.
In this episode I'm joined by Tim Faulkes from the NoSQL database company, Aerospike where we talk about how it fits in the database space for modern application development.
Новости Batali Уравновешенность для Chef Grafana 2 lattice Docker machine Vault Project Ansible 1.9.1, Ansible и Windows Docker patterns Тестирование многих нод с TestKitchen 5 причин, почему staging не нужен Перезагрузка Haproxy без простоев Aerospike и маркетинг Elasticsearch и маркетинг Выбирайте скучные технологии Будущее за неизменной инфраструктурой Сервис ориентированная архитектура в Yelp Конференция RootConf DevOps митап в рамках RootConf Интервью с Антоном Колдаевым из Basecamp Твиттер Антона
Новости Docker in Production — What We’ve Learned Launching Over 300 Million Containers boycott docker Давайте взглянем на Docker еще раз Docker 1.5 Consul Day: Consul 0.5, Consul-template 0.7.0, Envconsul 0.5.0 Интервью с Митчелом Хашимото: часть первая и вторая Grocery delivery от facebook DevOps чеклист Все, что вы хотели знать про Кубернитес, но боялись спросить Обсуждение D: Жажда крови Бегущий по лезвию Мечтают ли андроиды об электроовцах? Интервью с Николаем Рекубратским про Aerospike Выступление Николая на RailsClub 2012
Новости Вышел goiardi 0.9.0 ChefDK 0.4.0 Почему заморозки кода не помогают избежать простоя Scalable Architecture DR CoN Админам пора снова в институт Prometheus monitoring at Soundcloud Дизайнерские коровы и интенсивное фермерство Zabbix community repos Хороший год для Ansible Обсуждение Aerospike SSD почти как RAM Миллион записей в секунду на 50 нодах Сертификация SSD Интервью с Игорем Курочкиным Твиттер Игоря GitHub Игоря