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An airhacks.fm conversation with Francesco Nigro (@forked_franz) about: starting with a used Commodore 64 without display, breakdancing as a hobby and its influence on his learning approach, studying computer science at university with a focus on AI and compilers, pursuing a PhD in reinforcement learning, transitioning to IoT and embedded system work, discovering high-performance computing and concurrency patterns like the Disruptor, contributing to open-source projects, persistence in joining Red Hat despite initial rejection, rewriting ActiveMQ Artemis journal, considering Hazelcast before ultimately choosing Red Hat, working on messaging and performance optimization at Red Hat, becoming the performance expert for quarkus, journey from assembly and C programming to Java performance optimization, the importance of understanding low-level details in high-level languages, the impact of container resources on Java JVM performance, the value of deep technical knowledge in the age of AI and LLMs, Francesco's current role at Red Hat focusing on Quarkus performance and scalability issues Francesco Nigro on twitter: @forked_franz
JUG İstanbul podcastin yeni serisinin 1. bölümü ile karşınızdayız! Konuklarımız Hüseyin Babal, Özlem Güncan, Tahir Murat AĞIN Bölümün konu başlıkları: 1. Cloud Engineer nedir ve sizi bu alana yönlendiren motivasyon neydi? 2. Hazelcast, Sony ve eBay gibi büyük firmalarda cloud Engineer yapmak nasıl bir deneyimdi? Bu şirketlerde çalışırken karşılaştığınız en büyük zorluklar nelerdi? 3. Microservices kavramını nasıl tanımlarsınız ve bu mimarinin son yıllarda bu kadar popüler hale gelmesinin sebepleri nelerdir? 4. Global firmalarda mühendis olarak çalışmanın getirdiği sorumluluklar nelerdir ve bu deneyimler kariyerinize nasıl katkı sağladı? 5. Kariyeriniz boyunca içerik üreticiliği (blog yazarlığı, Twitch, YouTube) nasıl bir rol oynadı ve bu platformlarda deneyimlerinizi paylaşmanın size ve topluluğa faydaları neler oldu? 6. Cloud Engineer geleceği hakkında ne düşünüyorsunuz? Önümüzdeki yıllarda hangi teknolojiler ve trendler öne çıkacak? 7. Kariyer hedefleri olan ve iyi firmalarda çalışmak isteyen mühendislere ne gibi tavsiyelerde bulunursunuz?
Renegade Thinkers Unite: #2 Podcast for CMOs & B2B Marketers
What does it take to move up market and start targeting the enterprise market? In this episode, host Drew Neisser is joined by Allyson Havener (SVP of Marketing at TrustRadius), Sheri Chin (CMO of Galileo Financial Technologies), and Jakki Geiger (most recently CMO of Hazelcast) to discuss how to navigate the strategic shift. From aligning sales and marketing teams to crafting tailored messaging, these marketing leaders share real-world experiences on what works—and what doesn't—when moving up market. Key Discussion Points: How to identify when it's time to move up market. The internal shifts needed to target enterprise customers successfully. Leveraging account-based marketing and targeted content for larger deals. The importance of partnerships in breaking into the enterprise market. How to balance retaining SMB customers while scaling to serve enterprise clients. Tune in to hear real-world strategies for taking your business to the next level by moving up market. For full show notes and transcripts, visit https://renegademarketing.com/podcasts/ To learn more about CMO Huddles, visit https://cmohuddles.com/
How can PMs build scalable product businesses? In this episode of Product Talk hosted by Sid Shaik, Hazelcast Fmr. CPO Manish Devgan shares lessons on scaling product businesses, including the importance of establishing a clear product vision and worldview. He discusses growth engines like technology advantages and insights into customer workloads. Manish also describes tactics such as establishing a product strategy board to gather customer feedback. Tune in for valuable perspectives on building scalable product businesses.
To we're joined by Hazelcast's Avtar Raikmo (Head of Platform Engineer) and Fawaz Ghali (Head of Developer Relations). They're joining us to talk about community building, the need to empower staff and solve real world problems. But that community needs to come on a journey, so how do you do that? How do you take someone from being a developer building solutions, to a commitment to enterprise customers. Also on the show we ask if AI should summarize articles for us? https://www.theverge.com/2023/8/15/23833045/google-artificial-intelligence-summary-chrome-sge
On this episode, Andrew Porter, Principal — Alliances & Ecosystems at Pariveda, and Sophie Zugnoni, Senior Director — Cloud Sales at Hazelcast, talk about tips and strategies for partnering with cloud providers. Pariveda is a consulting firm that solves complex technology and business problems, while Hazelcast is a real-time stream processing platform for building applications for taking action on data immediately. The discussion focuses on the three partnership angles, co-selling with an ISV, cloud marketplaces, which roles should work with partners, integrations from a SaaS perspective, co-marketing and metrics for measuring how effective co-marketing is, standing out from competitors, and executive alignment. Andrew Porter - https://www.linkedin.com/in/andrewsporter/ Sophie Zugnoni - https://www.linkedin.com/in/sophiezugnoni/ Note: SaaS Connect 2023 will take place in San Francisco April 19th and 20th. If you would like to be a sponsor, please contact us at admin@cloudsoftwareassociation.com for information. Thank you to our amazing podcast team at Content Allies. Want to launch your own B2B revenue-generating podcasts? Contact them at https://ContentAllies.com. #cloud #saas #software
In this latest podcast from The New Stack, we interview Manish Devgan, chief product officer for Hazelcast, which offers a real time stream processing engine. This interview was recorded at KubeCon+CloudNativeCon, held last October in Detroit. "'Real time' means different things to different people, but it's really a business term," Devgan explained. In the business world, time is money, and the more quickly you can make a decision, using the right data, the more quickly one can take action. Although we have many "batch-processing" systems, the data itself rarely comes in batches, Devgan said. "A lot of times I hear from customers that are using a batch system, because those are the things which are available at that time. But data is created in real time sensors, your machines, espionage data, or even customer data — right when customers are transacting with you." What is a Real Time Data Processing Engine? A real time data processing engine can analyze data as it is coming in from the source. This is different from traditional approaches that store the data first, then analyze it later. Bank loans may is example of this approach. With a real time data processing engine in place, a bank can offer a loan to a customer using an automated teller machine (ATM) in real time, Devgan suggested. "As the data comes in, you can actually take action based on context of the data," he argued. Such a loan app may combine real-time data from the customer alongside historical data stored in a traditional database. Hazelcast can combine historical data with real time data to make workloads like this possible. In this interview, we also debated the merits of Kafka, the benefits of using a managed service rather than running an application in house, Hazelcast's users, and features in the latest release of the Hazelcast platform.
В 35 выпуске подкаста Javaswag поговорили с Алексеем Рагозиным о распределенных кэшах, сборке мусора и профилировании приложений 00:01:59 О себе 00:07:16 Сборщики мусора 00:13:25 Куда делись распределенные кэши? 00:20:14 Отказоустойчивость 00:23:14 Что с Oracle Coherence, Hazelcast, GridGain 00:27:44 Индустрия ушла в ивент стриминг 00:30:25 Ретроспектива сборщиков мусора в Джаве 00:42:13 Тюнинг сборщика мусора 00:53:15 Джава и контейнеры 01:01:06 Профилировщики 01:28:16 Сейфпонты и сисколы 01:32:36 Работы джава консультантом 01:38:43 Будущее профайлеров Ссылки от гостя Блог - https://blog.ragozin.info/ Эвенты - https://aragozin.timepad.ru/ Профайлер - https://github.com/aragozin/jvm-tools Cборка мусора в Java без пауз - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n89CZS0u6dY Мастер-класс по Java Mission Control - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wm2JNlaJJ5k Java и Linux — особенности эксплуатации - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HVVsjyVxcJ8 Мастер-класс: Новые и старые возможности Java Flight Recorder в OpenJDK 11 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=skNOBoazKPI Гость - https://blog.ragozin.info/ Кип сейф! 🖖
An airhacks.fm conversation with Lenny Primak (@lprimak) about: previous appearance of lenny on airhacks: "#137 (fake) reactive programming, project loom, chunked IO", the airhacks.tv show, captains and first officers, Payara's Clustered Singleton EJB singletons and clusters, JBoss HA-Singleton, Paxos algorithm, JSR-223, Hazelcast partitioning, hazelcast metrics, hazelcast's DataSerializable, Apache Shiro commitment, Benjamin Marwell as guest on "#181 Java Authentication and Authorization with Apache Shiro", Apache Tapestry ships with own dependency injection framework, Securing Web Applications with Apache Shiro, Cesna Citation CJ4, Lenny Primak on twitter: @lprimak
Nach einer etwas längeren Pause sind Tom und André wieder frisch "geboostert" zurück. Es geht locker los mit Apple-Themen, danach mit dem Thema PV + Stromtarife, um dann endlich wieder einmal beim Thema Softwareentwicklung zu landen. Dieses Mal im Technikteil: Komponentenframeworks, Auth Services, Hetzner und Hazelcast.
2022-04-05 Weekly News - Episode 142Watch the video version on YouTube at https://youtu.be/obJEJPSwpWgHosts: Eric Peterson - Senior Developer at Ortus SolutionsBrad Wood - Software Consultant at Ortus SolutionsThanks to our Sponsor - Ortus SolutionsThe makers of ColdBox, CommandBox, ForgeBox, TestBox and all your favorite box-en out there. A few ways to say thanks back to Ortus Solutions: Like and subscribe to our videos on YouTube. Help ORTUS reach for the Stars - Star and Fork our Repos Star all of your Github Box Dependencies from CommandBox with https://www.forgebox.io/view/commandbox-github Subscribe to our Podcast on your Podcast Apps and leave us a review Sign up for a free or paid account on CFCasts, which is releasing new content every week Buy Ortus's Book - 102 ColdBox HMVC Quick Tips and Tricks on GumRoad (http://gum.co/coldbox-tips) Patreon SupportWe have 36 patreons providing 96% of the funding for our Modernize or Die Podcasts via our Patreon site: https://www.patreon.com/ortussolutions. News and EventsQuick v5 betaMajor performance improvements - over 50% decrease in execution time!https://quick.ortusbooks.com/v/5.0.0-1/whats-new#5.0.0https://forgebox.io/view/quick/version/5.0.0-beta.3qb v8.8.0 betaCouple of fixes from beta feedback.https://forgebox.io/view/qb/version/8.8.0-beta.4ColdBox Elixir v4 betaWebpack 5!!! Node 16+!! All the updated dependencies.https://coldbox-elixir.ortusbooks.com/v/v4/migration_guide#v4.0.0ContentBox 5.2.0 Released!A quick bug fix update for ContentBox!https://contentbox.ortusbooks.com/intro/release-history/whats-new-with-5.2.0ICYMI - Into the Box 2022 CFP is now open!Into the Box will be live in Houston in September 2022. We want you to speak there! Topic submission closes at midnight April 17th, 2022.https://forms.gle/HR1vQf2T5rs8yCZo9https://intothebox.orgICYMI - Ortus Webinar - March - ForgeBoxication with Gavin PickinMarch 25th, 2022 Time: 11:00 AM Central Time (US and Canada)ForgeBox is CFML's package management system, and in this webinar you will learn how you can use it with any cfml app you have. You'll learn how to use ForgeBox packaged in your app, commit your own code to ForgeBox, and if we have time we might even make your code into a ColdBox module.CFCasts: https://cfcasts.com/series/ortus-webinars-2022/videos/gavin-pickin-on-forgeboxication/Ortus Webinar - April - cbSecurity: Passwords, Tokens, and JWTs with Eric PetersonApril 29th 202211:00 AM Central Time (US and Canada)Learn how to integrate cbSecurity into your application whether you are using passwords, API tokens, JWTs, or a combination of all three!More Webinars: https://www.ortussolutions.com/events/webinars Adobe WorkshopsJoin the Adobe ColdFusion Workshop to learn how you and your agency can leverage ColdFusion to create amazing web content. This one-day training will cover all facets of Adobe ColdFusion that developers need to build applications that can run across multiple cloud providers or on-premiseTHURSDAY, APRIL 21, 202210:00 AM PDTAdobe ColdFusion TruthsMark Takatahttps://adobe-coldfusion-truths.meetus.adobeevents.com/TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 20229:00 AM CETAdobe ColdFusion WorkshopDamien Bruyndonckx https://adobe-workshop-coldfusion.meetus.adobeevents.com/FREE :)Full list - https://meetus.adobeevents.com/coldfusion/ CFCasts Content Updateshttps://www.cfcasts.comJust ReleasedGavin Pickin on ForgeBoxication (free)https://cfcasts.com/series/ortus-webinars-2022/videos/gavin-pickin-on-forgeboxicationComing SoonMore in Publish Your First ForgeBox PackageConferences and TrainingDevNexus 2022 - The largest Java conference in the USApril 12-14, 2022Atlanta, GABrad & Luis will be speakingLuis - Alpine.js: Declare and React with SimplicityBrad - What's a Pull Request? (Contributing to Open Source)https://devnexus.com/DockerConMay 10, 2022Free Online Virtual ConferenceDockerCon will be a free, immersive online experience complete with Docker product demos , breakout sessions, deep technical sessions from Docker and our partners, Docker experts, Docker Captains, our community and luminaries from across the industry and much more. Don't miss your chance to gather and connect with colleagues from around the world at the largest developer conference of the year. Sign up to pre-register for DockerCon 2022!https://www.docker.com/dockercon/ US VueJS ConfFORT LAUDERDALE, FL • JUNE 8-10, 2022Beach. Code. Vue.Workshop day: June 8Main Conference: June 9-10https://us.vuejs.org/Into The Box 2022Solid Dates - September 2022One day workshops before the two day conference!Early bird pricing available until April 30, 2022Call for Speakers:https://forms.gle/HR1vQf2T5rs8yCZo9Conference Website:https://intothebox.orgCF SummitIn person at Las Vegas, NV in October 2022!Official-”ish” dates:Oct 3rd & 4th - CFSummit ConferenceOct 5th - Adobe Certified Professional: Adobe ColdFusion Certification Classes & Testshttps://twitter.com/MarkTakata/status/1511210472518787073Into the Box Latam 2022Tentative dates - Dec 1-2CFCampStill waiting as well.More conferencesNeed more conferences, this site has a huge list of conferences for almost any language/community.https://confs.tech/Blogs, Tweets, and Videos of the Week03/30/2022 - Blog - Ben Nadel - Using Closures To Bind Naked Functions To Components In ColdFusionWhen we think about a "method signature", we often think solely about the arguments that it accepts and the type of data that it returns. But, there's more to a method signature, such as the mode in which it can be invoked. Most methods can only be invoked as a member method. However, in some cases, an Object's API allows for methods to be detached and passed-around as "naked functions". In ColdFusion, we can use Closures / Lambdas to bind a Function reference to a ColdFusion Component instance such that the "member method" can be used - and work correctly - as a "naked function".https://www.bennadel.com/blog/4240-using-closures-to-bind-naked-functions-to-components-in-coldfusion.htm04/03/2022 - Blog - Ben Nadel - Adding FusionReactor Sub-Transaction Breakdowns To My ColdFusion BlogA couple of years ago, I wrote about how we're using the FusionReactor API (FRAPI) to instrument our Lucee CFML apps at work. And, now that I have FusionReactor installed on my ColdFusion 2021 blog, I've been translating some of that logic over to this site. I recently demonstrated that FusionReactor gave me critical insights into my SQL queries and my in-memory caching techniques. And, this morning, I added some "Tracked Transactions" to help me understand how long certain portions of my ColdFusion request was taking to execute.Especially useful since FusionReactor doesn't provide CFC method nameshttps://www.bennadel.com/blog/4242-adding-fusionreactor-sub-transaction-breakdowns-to-my-coldfusion-blog.htmUseful link: https://forgebox.io/view/FRAPISDK04/04/2022 - Blog - Ben Nadel - Moving My Short-Code Redirects To NetlifyFor years, I've had my own "short code" URL, bjam.in. There's no meaningful reason for me to have it - only, that I was raised in an era when short codes were all the rage. And, an era in which Twitter actually counted embedded URLs as part of the overall message length (something that they no longer do). But, one thing that's always bothered me about bjam.in is that it didn't have an SSL Certificate. I never wanted to pay for one since the site does nothing but redirect to www.bennadel.com, which does have an SSL Certificate. To remedy this, I've moved my bjam.in logic over to Netlify which automatically provisions SSL Certificates using Let's Encrypt.https://www.bennadel.com/blog/4243-moving-my-short-code-redirects-to-netlify.htm04/05/2022 - Blog - Ben Nadel - Adding CreateTimeSpan() To Date/Time Values In ColdFusionIn ColdFusion, it's trivial to add a given date-part, such an "hour" or a "day", to an existing date - there are built-in functions and member-methods for this task. But, it's a little harder to mix "Dates" with "Time Spans". Doing so, often leads to a fractional numeric value. This fractional value is a "numeric date". There are a number of ways to cast between "numeric dates" and "dates"; but, I wanted to look at how we can avoid casting by thinking about what a "time span" actually is; and, how we can efficiently add and remove time spans to and from dates in ColdFusion.https://www.bennadel.com/blog/4244-adding-createtimespan-to-date-time-values-in-coldfusion.htm04/03/2022 - Tweet - @cfhawaiiWe are looking for a speaker on #coldFusion ORM DM me if interestedhttps://twitter.com/cfhawaii/status/151080504602325401804/01/2022 - Tweet - @ortussolutionsThe Ortus USA Team has been working hard at this year's retreat. Big things are coming…https://twitter.com/ortussolutions/status/1510020360166641665(Not an April Fools Joke.
Application Modernization: A Podcast for High-Growth Software Companies
Hazelcast is a real-time data platform that can run anywhere—from the edge to the data center to the cloud. In other words, it brings the computation to the data rather than moving the data to the computation. That enables the ability to connect insights to the real-time actions of the customer. Want to hear more about it? John DesJardins , Chief Technology Officer, and Mark Santos , Vice President of Worldwide Business Development, join the show to discuss how Hazelcast can accelerate business decisions, the role that Kubernetes plays in modern data processing, and why it's important to have a good partner ecosystem. We discuss: The variety of use cases for Hazelcast Hazelcast's strong alliances with other independent software vendors and hyperscalers How Kubernetes is changing the way we process data Advice for an up-and-coming technologist Want to hear more stories from high growth software companies? Subscribe to Application Modernization on Apple Podcasts,Spotify , or check out our website. Listening on a desktop & can't see the links? Just search for Application Modernization in your favorite podcast player.
Miko Matsumura is a General Partner with gCC Gumi Cryptos Capital, a Silcon Valley investment fund with over $400M in assets including early-stage investments in unicorns like OpenSea, Yield Guild Games, Celsius Network, VEGA Protocol, Qredo and 1Inch Network. Miko fell in love with open source software 25 years ago as chief Developer Evangelist for the Java Programming Language and Platform at Sun Microsystems. Since then he has been building open source software startups in Silicon Valley including raising over $50 million in venture capital for developer platform companies such as Gradle and financial infrastructure companies like Hazelcast and has participated in multiple exits including INFRAVIO, webMethods, and Db4O. He is an advisor in successful startups like Celsius (CeFi Lending), Idle Finance (DeFi Yield Aggregator), Pundi X (Payments), and KEYLESS (ID infrastructure). He holds a Master's degree in Neuroscience from Yale University where he worked on abstract computational neural networks. In this episode, we discuss the state of the union speech and a conversation about where we are in the blockchain journey and why this matters. Where are we in crypto? What have we achieved? What worked? What hasn't worked? Where do we go next?
HazelCast: Discussing Access for Athletics and Alternative Sports
On this episode of The Hazelcast, we sit down with paraclimber, imagineer, and cat dad Tanner Cislaw and his partner Izzy Dean to discuss what it takes to go from a life changing injury to a world class athlete. Tanner highlights the future of outdoor accessibility and our favorite topic, cheese. Tune in to hear tales from his time at the red square and what future projects are on his tick list.
➡️ Like The Show? Leave A Rating: https://ratethispodcast.com/successstory ➡️ About The Guest Miko is a General Partner with Gumi Ventures, a US $30M investment fund focused early stage blockchain startups and a cofounder of crypto exchange Evercoin, Miko fell in love with open source software 25 years ago as chief Evangelist for the Java Language and Platform at Sun Microsystems. Since then he has been building open source software startups in Silicon Valley including raising over $50 million in venture capital for developer platform companies such as Gradle and financial infrastructure companies like Hazelcast and has participated in multiple exits including INFRAVIO, webMethods, and Db4O. He is an advisor in successful startups like Celsius (CeFi Lending), Idle Finance (DeFi Yield Aggregator), Pundi X (Payments), and KEYLESS (ID infrastructure). He has been an investor with Focus Ventures, a firm with over $800M under management, 9 IPOs and 44 exits and blockchain firm Pantera Capital. He holds a Master's degree in Neuroscience from Yale University where he worked on abstract computational neural networks. ➡️ Talking Points 00:00 - Intro. 08:02 - Blockchain.. breaking away from institutional systems. 15:42 - Crypto hacking. 20:21 - Questioning people's motives. 26:09 - What is De-Fi? 32:10 - Blockchain & Crypto adoption. 46:11 - How De-Fi is changing lives. ➡️ Show Links https://twitter.com/mikojava https://miko.com/ ➡️ Podcast Sponsors 1. Canva — Create Content & Design Anything (No Skill Required) https://canva.me/successstory — Free 45 Day Canva Pro Trial 2. Better Help —Virtual Therapy & Mental Wellness https://betterhelp.com/scottclary — 10% Off First Month 3. Postie—Direct mail for digital marketers. https://postie.com/successstory (Free Demo)
https://go.dok.community/slack https://dok.community/ ABSTRACT OF THE TALK You want to build a Kubernetes Operator for your software. Which tool to choose? Operator SDK with Helm, Ansible, or Go? Or maybe start from scratch with Python, Java, or any other programming language? And what is the right phase in the Operator Capability/Maturity Model that you should provide? In my talk I'll present: - Different ways of building Kubernetes Operators - Demo of building the same Operator using different tools - Methods used by the most popular Operators (Couchbase, Prometheus, MongoDB) - Operator Capability Model and how it affects your toolkit - Our journey with Hazelcast Operator BIO Tech Lead of the Cloud-Native Team at Hazelcast, author of the book "Continuous Delivery with Docker and Jenkins", trainer, and conference speaker. He specializes in Java development, Cloud environments, and Continuous Delivery. A former employee in a number of companies and scientific organizations: Google, CERN, AGH University, and more.
Miko is a General Partner with Gumi Ventures, a US $30M investment fund focused early stage blockchain startups and a cofounder of crypto exchange Evercoin. Miko ignited his passion for open source software 25 years ago as chief Evangelist for the Java Language and Platform at Sun Microsystems. Since then he has been building open source software startups in Silicon Valley including raising over $50 million in venture capital for developer platform companies such as Gradle and financial infrastructure companies like Hazelcast and has participated in multiple exits including INFRAVIO, webMethods, and Db4O. He is an advisor in successful startups like Celsius (CeFi Lending), Idle Finance (DeFi Yield Aggregator), Pundi X (Payments), and KEYLESS (ID infrastructure). He has been an investor with Focus Ventures, a firm with over $800M under management, 9 IPOs and 44 exits and blockchain firm Pantera Capital. He holds an Master's degree in Neuroscience from Yale University where he worked on abstract computational neural networks. Miko's mission is to promote increased transparency, equality, inclusion, innovation and lower cost financial infrastructure through open source. Website: https://www.mikobits.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/MikoBits LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mikomatsumura/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/geeksofthevalley/support
В 22 выпуске подкаста Javaswag поговорили с Владимиром Озеровым об архитектуре Ignite, Hazelcast и фреймворкe для построения SQL движков - Apache Calcite 01:53 О себе 05:26 Для чего задумывался Ignite 10 лет назад? Terracotta, Hazelcast 16:00 Зачем распределенной мапе SQL запросы? 22:35 Что дает проекту вступление в Apache? 29:59 Другие проекты в Apache 31:38 Архитектура In Memory Data Grid(IMDG) 39:16 Протоколы и формат хранения 43:04 Тестирование распределенных систем 53:30 Apache Calcite 1:08:40 Почему SQL вновь популярен? 1:14:14 Маркетинг, продажи для инженера 1:18:05 Будущее IMDG 1:22:30 Революционный Apache Calcite и команда Querify Labs www.querifylabs.com/ Apache Calcite - calcite.incubator.apache.org/ Гость - twitter.com/devozerov Кип сейф! 🖖
In this podcast, John DesJardin, Chief Technology Officer at Hazelcast, met with InfoQ podcast co-host Thomas Betts to discuss the idea of continuous intelligence. This is a paradigm shift from traditional business intelligence, and relies on a corresponding move from batch-based ETL and reporting to continuous processing of streaming data. Although the languages being used, such as Python and SQL, will be familiar, developers must pay special attention to the characteristics of time-series data, especially in near-real-time scenarios. We cover the current state of the tools and technologies in use, why companies are adopting continuous intelligence to remain competitive, and we even get a bit into what the future of data processing and analysis will look like. Read a transcript of this interview: https://bit.ly/3iDmQ0i Subscribe to our newsletters: - The InfoQ weekly newsletter: bit.ly/24x3IVq - The Software Architects' Newsletter [monthly]: www.infoq.com/software-architects-newsletter/ Upcoming Virtual Events - https://events.infoq.com/ InfoQ Live: https://live.infoq.com/ - June 22, 2021 - July 20, 2021 - August 17, 2021 Follow InfoQ: - Twitter: twitter.com/InfoQ - LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/infoq - Facebook: bit.ly/2jmlyG8 - Instagram: @infoqdotcom - Youtube: www.youtube.com/infoq
A couple of years ago, continuous integration in the JVM ecosystem meant Jenkins. Since then, a lot of other tools have been made available. But new tools don't mean new features, just new ways. Beside that, what about continuous deployment? There's no tool that allows to deploy new versions of a JVM-based application without downtime. The only way to achieve zero downtime is to have multiple nodes deployed on a platform. And yet, achieving true continuous deployment of bytecode on one single JVM instance is possible if one changes one's way of looking at things. What if compilation could be seen as changes? What if those changes could be stored in a data store, and a listener on this data store could stream those changes to the running production JVM via the Attach API? Nicolas Frankel from Hazelcast joined to share an approach that they have been experimenting with. Nicolas is accompanied in the talk by Aapo Romu, a software architect at Eficode ROOT team. Nicolas in Twitter: https://twitter.com/nicolas_frankel Related links: - Design and create digital services to drive your strategy: https://hubs.li/H0PwMS70 - An award-winning one-stop shop for DevOps tools: https://hubs.li/H0PwPbx0 Related content: - Play to learn how to design the right Continuous Delivery pipelines: https://hubs.li/H0PwQzZ0 - An Experiment in Streaming: Bytecode Continuous Deployment: https://hazelcast.com/blog/an-experiment-in-streaming-bytecode-continuous-deployment/ - hazelcast-demos / bytecode-streaming on Github: https://github.com/hazelcast-demos/bytecode-streaming/ - Warszawa Java User Group (WJUG) with Nicolas Frankel "Securing the JVM": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bgo7dcCbqV8&list=PL0EuBuKK-s1EL-K3okpYwR0QZbAPRVmEG&index=12 - A streaming use-case: experimenting with bytecode continuous deployment - Nicolas Fränkel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9j4RvI_vARQ&list=PL0EuBuKK-s1EL-K3okpYwR0QZbAPRVmEG&index=60 - Beyond “Hello World” – Zero-Downtime Deployments with Hazelcast on Kubernetes: https://hazelcast.com/blog/beyond-hello-world-zero-downtime-deployments-with-hazelcast-on-kubernetes/
Miko is a General Partner with Gumi Ventures, a US $30M investment fund focused early stage blockchain startups and a cofounder of crypto exchange Evercoin. Miko ignited his passion for open source software 25 years ago as chief Evangelist for the Java Language and Platform at Sun Microsystems. Since then he has been building open source software startups in Silicon Valley including raising over $50 million in venture capital for developer platform companies such as Gradle and financial infrastructure companies like Hazelcast and has participated in multiple exits including INFRAVIO, webMethods, and Db4O. He is an advisor in successful startups like Celsius (CeFi Lending), Idle Finance (DeFi Yield Aggregator), Pundi X (Payments), and KEYLESS (ID infrastructure). He has been an investor with Focus Ventures, a firm with over $800M under management, 9 IPOs and 44 exits and blockchain firm Pantera Capital. He holds an Master’s degree in Neuroscience from Yale University where he worked on abstract computational neural networks. Miko’s mission is to promote increased transparency, equality, inclusion, innovation and lower cost financial infrastructure through open source. Website: https://www.mikobits.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/MikoBits LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mikomatsumura/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/geeksofthevalley/support
An airhacks.fm conversation with Rudy De Busscher (@rdebusscher) about: plants and genetics, strawberry cross-pollination experiments, playing plant related games, statistic calculation and classification algorithms, tomato quality check automation, fourier transform on tomatoes, learning Pascal, learning Oracle forms, switching to Java Server Faces on WebLogic Server, from WebLogic to Glassfish, wasting time by creating a "unique snowflake", working as Java EE consultant, blood samples analysis with device integration, Java Connector Architecture and Java EE, starting at Payara, Payara implements MicroProfile 4.0, Payara implements MicroProfile "from scratch", Payara comes with deep MicroProfile integration, Payara InSight monitoring dashboard, the "happy case" focus, letsencrypt Payara integration, Payara Grid is the successor of Glassfish Shoal, persistent EJB timers can be synchronized with Hazelcast, Payara Cloud comes with "serverless" experience, Payara Cloud is kubernetes operator, the WAR as cloud deployment unit, a Payara Micro for each WAR in a Pod, Payara Server is the orchestrator, Payara Cloud is currently running on Microsoft Azure Rudy De Busscher on twitter: @rdebusscher
Miko is a General Partner with Gumi Ventures, a US $30M investment fund focused early stage blockchain startups and a cofounder of crypto exchange Evercoin. Miko ignited his passion for open source software 25 years ago as chief Evangelist for the Java Language and Platform at Sun Microsystems. Since then he has been building open source software startups in Silicon Valley including raising over $50 million in venture capital for developer platform companies such as Gradle and financial infrastructure companies like Hazelcast and has participated in multiple exits including INFRAVIO, webMethods, and Db4O. He is an advisor in successful startups like Celsius (CeFi Lending), Idle Finance (DeFi Yield Aggregator), Pundi X (Payments), and KEYLESS (ID infrastructure). He has been an investor with Focus Ventures, a firm with over $800M under management, 9 IPOs and 44 exits and blockchain firm Pantera Capital. He holds an Master’s degree in Neuroscience from Yale University where he worked on abstract computational neural networks. Miko’s mission is to promote increased transparency, equality, inclusion, innovation and lower cost financial infrastructure through open source. Website: https://www.mikobits.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/MikoBits LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mikomatsumura/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/geeksofthevalley/support
Участники: Старинин Андрей - преподаватель Компьютерная Академия ШАГ Воронеж, преподаватель колледжа ВИВТ Пушкин Сергей - backend-разработчик Reksoft, спикер, фасилитатор, развиваю IT среду в Воронеже - https://t.me/vrnit Андрей Гончаров - full-stack TypeScript и JavaScript разработчик. Успел поработать в двух аутсорсинговых компаниях, разрабатывая проекты различной величины: от небольших стартапов до кровавого энтерпрайза. Сейчас занимается всем, что связано с JavaScript в Hazelcast. Большой любитель open-source. Автор небольшого технического блога. Организатор BeerJS Voronezh - https://t.me/beer_js_voronezh Андрей Печкуров - давно и с удовольствием занимается проектированием и разработкой разнообразных веб-приложений и систем. Прошел путь от зеленого джуниора в небольшой продуктовой команде до solution architect в крупной аутсорсинговой компании. Несколько лет назад присоединился к инженерной команде Hazelcast и работает над различными продуктами компании, включая клиентскую Node.js-библиотеку. Кроме того, недавно подключился к команде Node.js core в качестве collaborator. Реестр IT-сообществ - https://github.com/IT-za-Edu/IT-community ******** Сайт - https://it-za-edu.github.io/ Группа в VK - https://vk.com/podcast_it_za_edu YouTube-канал - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8UfZgI5XR9Cgf2D9b1PKgw Telegram-канал - https://t.me/podcast_it_za_edu Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/it_za_edu
Что такое распределённые системы? Как и почему они стали мейнстримом в backend-разработке? Какие плюсы они несут? Все эти вопросы мы обсудили с Андреем Печкуровым из Hazelcast примерно за 15 минут. А дальше почти 2 часа обсуждения технических сложностей и того с чем предстоит столкнуться на пути к распределенности! Уже в ближайший понедельник 29 марта начнется конференция Podlodka Backend Crew, одной из тем недель которой будут как раз распределенные системы. По промокоду STAS777 скидос: https://podlodka.io/becrew Многие проблемы распределенных систем уходят с переходом в облака. Наши партнеры, компания Selectel (https://slc.tl/MEqHT), дают 1000р на облачную платформу по промокоду Podlodka. Вводить сюда: https://my.selectel.ru/vpc/ Поддержи лучший подкаст про IT: www.patreon.com/podlodka Также ждем вас, ваши лайки, репосты и комменты в мессенджерах и соцсетях! Telegram-чат: https://t.me/podlodka Telegram-канал: https://t.me/podlodkanews Страница в Facebook: www.facebook.com/podlodkacast/ Twitter-аккаунт: https://twitter.com/PodlodkaPodcast Полезные ссылки: - Consistency Models https://jepsen.io/consistency - Please stop calling databases CP or AP https://martin.kleppmann.com/2015/05/11/please-stop-calling-databases-cp-or-ap.html - Distributed Locks are Dead; Long Live Distributed Locks! https://hazelcast.com/blog/long-live-distributed-locks/ - Алгоритмы консенсуса. При чем тут Node.js? https://youtu.be/oO_4X8HwSTc - Patterns for distributed transactions within a microservices architecture https://developers.redhat.com/blog/2018/10/01/patterns-for-distributed-transactions-within-a-microservices-architecture/ - Designing Data-Intensive Applications https://www.amazon.com/Designing-Data-Intensive-Applications-Reliable-Maintainable/dp/1449373321 - Building Microservices https://samnewman.io/books/building_microservices/
Miko is a General Partner with Gumi Ventures, a US $30M investment fund focused early stage blockchain startups and a cofounder of crypto exchange Evercoin. Miko ignited his passion for open source software 25 years ago as chief Evangelist for the Java Language and Platform at Sun Microsystems. Since then he has been building open source software startups in Silicon Valley including raising over $50 million in venture capital for developer platform companies such as Gradle and financial infrastructure companies like Hazelcast and has participated in multiple exits including INFRAVIO, webMethods, and Db4O. He is an advisor in successful startups like Celsius (CeFi Lending), Idle Finance (DeFi Yield Aggregator), Pundi X (Payments), and KEYLESS (ID infrastructure). He has been an investor with Focus Ventures, a firm with over $800M under management, 9 IPOs and 44 exits and blockchain firm Pantera Capital. He holds an Master’s degree in Neuroscience from Yale University where he worked on abstract computational neural networks. Miko’s mission is to promote increased transparency, equality, inclusion, innovation and lower cost financial infrastructure through open source. Website: https://www.mikobits.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/MikoBits LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mikomatsumura/
Welcome to Episode 37 of the Asian Hustle Network Podcast! We are very excited to have Miko Matsumura on this week's episode. We interview Asian entrepreneurs around the world to amplify their voices and empower Asians to pursue their dreams and goals. We believe that each person has a message and a unique story from their entrepreneurial journey that they can share with all of us. Check us out on Anchor, iTunes, Stitcher, Google Play Music, TuneIn, Spotify, and more. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe and leave us a positive 5-star review. This is our opportunity to use the voices of the Asian community and share these incredible stories with the world. We release a new episode every Wednesday, so stay tuned! Miko is a General Partner with Gumi Ventures, a US $30M investment fund focused on early-stage blockchain startups, and a cofounder of crypto exchange Evercoin. Miko ignited his passion for open-source software 25 years ago as chief Evangelist for the Java Language and Platform at Sun Microsystems. Since then he has been building open source software startups in Silicon Valley including raising over $50 million in venture capital for developer platform companies such as Gradle and financial infrastructure companies like Hazelcast and has participated in multiple exits including INFRAVIO, webMethods, and Db4O. He is an advisor in successful startups like Celsius (CeFi Lending), Idle Finance (DeFi Yield Aggregator), Pundi X (Payments), and KEYLESS (ID infrastructure). He has been an investor with Focus Ventures, a firm with over $800M under management, 9 IPOs, and 44 exits, and blockchain firm Pantera Capital. He holds a Master’s degree in Neuroscience from Yale University where he worked on abstract computational neural networks. Miko’s mission is to promote increased transparency, equality, inclusion, innovation, and lower-cost financial infrastructure through open source. Please check out our Patreon at @asianhustlenetwork. We want AHN to continue to be meaningful and give back to the Asian community. If you enjoy our podcast and would like to contribute to our future, we hope you’ll consider becoming a patron. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/asianhustlenetwork/support
Software Engineer Andrey Goncharov joins the React Round Up crew to discuss how his company Hazelcast has approached visualizing hundreds of data points on potentially hundreds of computers in a way that makes sense to users. Dust off your math skills - it gets a little technical along the way as they discuss graphs, charts, performance optimizations and bottlenecks, and even handling accessibility of these data-intensive graphs. If you ever have to debug system failures and anomalies, this will be a worthwhile episode to check out. Panel Paige Niedringhaus TJ VanToll Guest Andrey Goncharov Sponsors Next Level Mastermind Raygun | Click here to get started on your free 14-day trial Links Hazelcast | The Leading In-Memory Computing Platform Chart.js | Open Source HTML5 Charts for your Website Picks Andrey- Designing Data-Intensive Applications by Martin Kleppmann Paige- Netflix Series | The Queen’s Gambit TJ- City of Stairs: A Novel (The Divine Cities) by Robert Jackson Bennett
Software Engineer Andrey Goncharov joins the React Round Up crew to discuss how his company Hazelcast has approached visualizing hundreds of data points on potentially hundreds of computers in a way that makes sense to users. Dust off your math skills - it gets a little technical along the way as they discuss graphs, charts, performance optimizations and bottlenecks, and even handling accessibility of these data-intensive graphs. If you ever have to debug system failures and anomalies, this will be a worthwhile episode to check out. Panel Paige Niedringhaus TJ VanToll Guest Andrey Goncharov Sponsors Next Level Mastermind Raygun | Click here to get started on your free 14-day trial Links Hazelcast | The Leading In-Memory Computing Platform Chart.js | Open Source HTML5 Charts for your Website Picks Andrey- Designing Data-Intensive Applications by Martin Kleppmann Paige- Netflix Series | The Queen’s Gambit TJ- City of Stairs: A Novel (The Divine Cities) by Robert Jackson Bennett
Miko is a General Partner with Gumi Ventures, a US $30M investment fund focused early stage blockchain startups and a cofounder of crypto exchange Evercoin. Miko ignited his passion for open source software 25 years ago as chief Evangelist for the Java Language and Platform at Sun Microsystems. Since then he has been building open source software startups in Silicon Valley including raising over $50 million in venture capital for developer platform companies such as Gradle and financial infrastructure companies like Hazelcast and has participated in multiple exits including INFRAVIO, webMethods, and Db4O. He is an advisor in successful startups like Celsius (CeFi Lending), Idle Finance (DeFi Yield Aggregator), Pundi X (Payments), and KEYLESS (ID infrastructure). He has been an investor with Focus Ventures, a firm with over $800M under management, 9 IPOs and 44 exits and blockchain firm Pantera Capital. He holds an Master’s degree in Neuroscience from Yale University where he worked on abstract computational neural networks. Miko’s mission is to promote increased transparency, equality, inclusion, innovation and lower cost financial infrastructure through open source. Website: https://www.mikobits.com Twitter: https://twitter.com/MikoBits LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mikomatsumura/
Créer une application ne consiste pas à écrire un code source immuable auquel plus personne ne prêtera attention. Au contraire, c'est un code fait pour être relu, maintenu et modifié. Or si les choses sont très claires en théorie, la pratique est comme toujours beaucoup plus complexe.Aujourd'hui, que nous soyons développeur ou SRE, nous sommes tous confrontés à l'écriture de code. Mais un code qui fait le job est-il nécessairement un bon code ? Est-ce que mon code est clair et compréhensible pour être maintenu par quelqu'un d'autre que moi ? Et en définitive, comment puis-je m'améliorer ?C'est sur ce terrain miné et riche de polémiques que Nicolas Frankel a accepté de me suivre. Nicolas est developer advocate pour Hazelcast, et ensemble nous discutons des propriétés qui font d'un code un code de qualité.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/electromonkeys)
Hazelcast delivers the in-memory computing platform that empowers Global 2000 enterprises to achieve ultra-fast application performance - at any scale. Built for low-latency data processing, Hazelcast's cloud-native in-memory data store and event stream processing software technologies are trusted by leading companies such as JPMorgan Chase, Charter Communications, Ellie Mae and National Australia Bank to accelerate data-centric applications. On this weeks episode of the Product Launch podcast, Sean and David cover Why industry subject matter expertise matters and how it differentiate you as a product professional The advantages of building a product for yourself How to keep your industry subject matter expertise to be better product professional Going from a siloed world of being an individual contributor to more of a leadership role for the organization and various functional groups Why product professionals need to maintain a healthy network of industry professionals Getting to know your customers personally so they will feel comfortable opening up to you so you can help them Resources: Flash Boys, by Michael Lewis - https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/24724602-flash-boys Automate This, by Christopher Steiner - https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/13542772-automate-this Competing Against Luck, by Clayton M. Christensen - https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/28820024-competing-against-luck Playing to Win, by A.G. Lafley - https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/13586928-playing-to-win How to Lead in Product Management, by Roman Pichler - https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/13586928-playing-to-win Hazelcast Websites - hazelcast.org , hazelcast.com Connecting with David: Connect with David on Twitter - https://twitter.com/dbrimley?lang=en
In memory computing provides significant performance benefits, but brings along challenges for managing failures and scaling up. Hazelcast is a platform for managing stateful in-memory storage and computation across a distributed cluster of commodity hardware. On top of this foundation, the Hazelcast team has also built a streaming platform for reliable high throughput data transmission. In this episode Dale Kim shares how Hazelcast is implemented, the use cases that it enables, and how it complements on-disk data management systems.
In this podcast, John DesJardins, field CTO and VP solution architecture at Hazelcast, sat down with InfoQ podcast co-host Daniel Bryant. Topics discussed included: how in-memory data grids have evolved, use cases at the edge (IoT, ML inference), integration of stream processing APIs and techniques, and how data grids can be used within application modernization. Listen to the podcast for more. Curated transcript and more information on the https://bit.ly/2FtBIgp Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Youtube: @InfoQ Follow us on Instagram: @infoqdotcom Stay informed on emerging trends, peer-validated early adoption of technologies, and architectural best practices. Subscribe to The Software Architects’ Newsletter: www.infoq.com/software-architects-newsletter/
For this week's episode, we spoke with Mike Yawn, a senior solution architect at Hazelcast, about the potential of in-memory computing to supercharge microservices and cloud native workloads. Yawn recently contributed a post to TNS explaining how an in-memory technologies could make microservices run more smoothly. Hazelcast offers an in-memory data grid, Hazelcast IMDG, along with stream processing software Hazelcast Jet. We wanted to know more about how in-memory could be used with microservices. While in-memory offers caching just like key-value database such as Redis, it also offers additional computing capacity, which can help process that data on the fly, Yawn explained.
For this week's episode, we spoke with Mike Yawn, a senior solution architect at Hazelcast, about the potential of in-memory computing to supercharge microservices and cloud native workloads. Yawn recently contributed a post to TNS explaining how an in-memory technologies could make microservices run more smoothly. Hazelcast offers an in-memory data grid, Hazelcast IMDG, along with stream processing software Hazelcast Jet. We wanted to know more about how in-memory could be used with microservices. While in-memory offers caching just like key-value database such as Redis, it also offers additional computing capacity, which can help process that data on the fly, Yawn explained.
An airhacks.fm conversation with Viktor Gamov (@gAmUssA) about: Russian, pirate 286 intel knock-off, starting with BASIC, typing programs from magazines, fun with computer graphics primitive in BASIC, Flash animations with ActionScript, drawing buttons with Visual Basic, learning C/C++ at the university, implementing a log scraper in Pearl to get an aggregated view, Unreal Tournament was the secret goal, enjoying the lack of no compilation in excel macros, Java and Flex development, creating GUIs with Borland C++ builder at university, the size of statically compiled libraries matters, optimising the size with MS Visual C++, exploring DirectX SDK, OpenGL vs. DirectX, enjoying MSDN with Visual Studio .net and C#, the Russian Development Software Network rsdn.org, Thinking in C++ over Thinking in Java, nice looking and opensource Eclipse IDE, writing web servers in Java, JRE vs. JDK, Moscow State University for Railway Engineering, writing backends with WebSphere and RAD, WebSphere Community Edition 5.0 vs. Geronimo vs. Tomcat, Borland JBuilder with JBCL, great DeveloperWorks from IBM, Scott Davis' articles about Groovy, smart and motivated kids, nice Ruby and Rails, Scott Davis and Grails, working on Russian Google -> Yandex, working with Yakov Vain in Flex and Java, writing the Enterprise Web Development book, working for Hazelcast and Talip Ozturk, speaking at JavaOne, working as solution architect, meeting Cay Horstmann - author of Core Java book, the CAP theorem, from Hazelcast to Conluent and Apache Kafka, building kafka-tutorials.confluent.io, Kafka and JMS are following opposite principles, from JMS persistent topics to Kafka, from Hadoop and Big Data to Kafka, BigData and lambda architecture, from batch to real time processing, data is an immutable set of events, no replay in JMS, the outbox pattern, Change Data Capture (CDC), debezium, Viktor Gamov on twitter: @gAmUssA, Victor's website: gamov.io
Miko Matsumura is a General Partner with Gumi Cryptos, a US $30M venture capital fund focused early stage blockchain startups and a Venture Partner with BitBull Capital, a cryptocurrency fund-of-funds. He is also an advisor to Arrington XRP Capital. He has been a keynote speaker at dozens of blockchain conferences around the world. He is also cofounder of crypto exchange Evercoin, Miko participated in the first wave of the Internet as chief Evangelist for the Java Language and Platform at Sun Microsystems and is now fully engaged in Internet of value. With 25 years of enterprise software marketing experience in Silicon Valley, he has raised over $50 million in venture capital for Open Source startups such as Gradle, Hazelcast and has participated in multiple exits including INFRAVIO, webMethods, Db4O. He has invested in open source money, advising successful startups like Celsius ($2B in loans), Pundi X (global point of sale devices), Refereum ($30M Gamer Affiliate Marketing), WiFiCoin (wifi Sharing), Guardian Circle (Decentralized Global 911 Emergency Services) and Hub (Decentralizing Professional Social Networking). He is also an LP with Focus Ventures, a firm with over $800M under management, 9 IPOs and 44 exits. He holds an Master’s degree in Neuroscience from Yale University where he worked on abstract computational neural networks. He’s leads the Crypto Underground meetup in San Francisco and is a well known speaker at many bitcoin and blockchain events. Website: https://www.miko.com LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mikomatsumura/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/mikocryptos Twitter: https://twitter.com/mikojava --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/geeksofthevalley/support
This week I speak about in-memory computing with Dale Kim of Hazelcast. I also look at the changing world of in-person trade shows, offices, and restaurants. https://hazelcast.com/ https://chrischinchilla.com/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/theweeklysqueak/message
Grzegorz Piwowarek joins us to discuss how Hazelcast's Quarkus Client brings it's elastically scalable distributed In-Memory computing to Quarkus.
An airhacks.fm conversation with Romain Manni-Bucau (@rmannibucau) about: PaintShop Pro, science fiction matte paintings, scene generation, short movies, 3D tool automation with scripting, starting C programming with GTK, programming PaintShop Pro "clone" as "hello, world", linux over windows, image editing involves math, learning algorithms from the internet, building winamp-like mp3 player with C++ and GTK, switching from C/C++ to Java, no memory management in Java, implementing problem-solvers with Java, developing "BigData" apps with Hazelcast, Talip Ozturk, implementing map-reduce algorithms for a banking sector with Hazelcast, using Apache openEJB, working with Jean-Louis Monteiro the openEJB committer, using openEJB for good start times and for testing, Java EE and standards do not impact your business code, working with friends at Tomitribe, implementing extensions for TomEE - the MicroProfile before MicroProfile, joining talend to implement batch processes, joining yupiik.com startup, Apache Spark, Apache Beam and ReactJS, using Apache Meecrowave, ReactJS vs. Custom Elements, WebComponents and Redux, deploying service on-the-fly with OSGi, integrating CDI with OSGI, working with Apache Aries, using OSGi to load machine learnings models, hot-loading modules for "Fluid Logic", OSGI alliance specs, Karaf OSGi, HTTP/2 with Felix, OSGi ConfigAdmin configuration, OSGi whiteboard pattern, Aries CDI, Romain Manni-Bucau on twitter: @rmannibucau, Romain's blog: rmannibucau.metawerx.net
Bu bölümümüzde geçtiğimiz yıl 295 milyon dolara Atlassian’a satılan Opsgenie firmasının içerisinde başlayan ve satışın gerçekleştiği gün kurulan Thundra ekibinin cto’su Serkan Özal ve ürün müdürü Emrah Şamdan’ı ağırladık. Kendileriyle Opsgenie’den Thundra’ya geçiş hikayelerini, geçtiğimiz aylarda aldıkları 4 milyon dolarlık yatırımı ve komünite yaratmanın ne kadar değerli olduğunu konuştuk. Teknik konulara ve özellikle serverless mimariye ilgili olanların bu bölümü dinlemelerini öneririz.00:01 - Serkan Özal kimdir?00:54 - Emrah Şamdan kimdir?01:40 - Thundra hikayesi nasıl başladı?02:19 - Monitor etmek nedir?04:28 - Thundra ismi nereden geldi?05:10 - Thundra şirket kurulumu08:15 - İş Modeli08:35 - Thundra ne yapar?11:05 - Fiyatlandırma ve freemium paketi özellikleri12:50 - İlk müşteriler nasıl bulundu ve yurtdışı oranları15:51 - Thought Leader ile yapılan anlaşmalar19:25 - 4 milyon dolarlık yatırım hikayesi20:25 - Gelen yatırım nereye harcanacak.21:18 - Digital marketing ve eventlerin payı24:51 - Deneyimler26:55 - KapanışSerkan Özal İletişim:https://www.linkedin.com/in/serkanozal/Emrah Şamdan İletişim: https://www.linkedin.com/in/emrah-samdan-424ba124/Hazelcast: https://hazelcast.com/Opsgenie: opsgenie.comComodo: comodo.comDatadog: datadoghq.comAWS summit: https://aws.amazon.com/events/summits/?global-event-sponsorship.sort-by=item.additionalFields.sortdate&global-event-sponsorship.sort-order=ascServerless Türkiye: https://www.meetup.com/Cloud-Serverless-Turkey/?chapter_analytics_code=UA-93907526-1Serverless Nedir: https://medium.com/serverless-turkey/nedir-bu-serverless-637a59a44e81Berkay Mollamustafaoğlu: https://www.linkedin.com/in/berkay/?originalSubdomain=tr
Our guest this episode is Fatema Hamdani, Co-Founder and President of Kraus Hamdani Aerospace, a startup that is pioneering Smart Persistent Intelligence Surveillance and Unmanned Aerial Systems. We're also talking about the real winner of the T-Mobile-Sprint Merger, Verizon's plan to double its 5G cities in 2020, Hazelcast, Huawei, Dessa, and more.
HazelCast: Discussing Access for Athletics and Alternative Sports
In this episode of the Hazelcast, we sat down with Kendall Wood @kendallanneyoga to discuss her work using yoga and mindfulness to teach firefighters that breath control, body awareness and self-reflection will not only improve their mental health but their well-being too. The opening statement comes from Rob Fox, a Local San Diego Firefighter IG: @salt_and_iron_training_ Support Kendall's efforts by making a donation: www.gofundme.com/f/yogaforfirefighters
HazelCast: Discussing Access for Athletics and Alternative Sports
Welcome to another episode of the Hazelcast! Today, we got a chance to sit down with Deon west and Luiz Perez of Outdoor Outreach. These guys run a Leadership course that gives their participants a chance to learn and develop the skills needed to run outdoor youth activities, access programming and more. Outdoor Outreach is a truly amazing organization and we had a great time talking about their passions for youth programming. So without further a due, please enjoy our conversation with Deon and Luis.
Hazelcast CEO, Kelly Herrell has an inspirational story. He put himself through graduate school by working on a commercial fishing boat for 18 hours a day, 7 days a week for 110 straight days in the unforgiving North Pacific each year. Here in 2019, he spearheads Hazelcast, an in-memory computing company providing services to JPMorgan Chase, Charter Communications, Ellie Mae, UBS, National Australia Bank, SigmaStream and many more. According to Kelly, this boom in in-memory computing is spurred by the need for extreme speed among Global 2000 businesses, as mere microseconds of delay can now mean billions in payment fraud undetected, missed e-commerce transactions or even failing to predict an industrial disaster. Hazelcast offers the fastest data processing on the market for the largest, most data-intensive companies, making it central to the growth of the category. Essentially, the leading in-memory computing platform company addresses the growing demand for enhanced application performance, speed and scalability. Hazelcast’s in-memory computing platform is comprised of two core products: Hazelcast IMDG and Jet. Hazelcast IMDG is an in-memory data grid built and proven to provide the performance at scale required by the world’s largest organizations. Hazelcast Jet, is an ultra-fast, application embeddable, stream and batch processing engine capable of supporting real-time streaming data. The company also offers Hazelcast Cloud, a fully managed, low latency data layer for cloud-based workloads at any scale. Hazelcast’s customers include six of the world’s 10 largest banks and 36 of the Fortune Global 500; its technology is deployed at nearly every major credit card company, five of the world’s largest e-commerce companies and four of the largest telecommunications companies. Hazelcast CEO, Kelly Herrell joins me on my tech podcast to share his inspirational story.
HazelCast: Discussing Access for Athletics and Alternative Sports
The HazelCast hosts Eric Franks and Jillian Yatsko introduce The Hazel Foundation for Athletics. Episode one covers the history of athletic inclusion, the background of adaptive climbing, and why these ideas will improve your community. Listen further to hear about upcoming projects and what you can expect to hear in following episodes!
Join Rafał Leszko, Software Engineer at Hazelcast, as he discusses caching and other valid use cases for using in-memory key-value stores. He will also introduce the Hazelcast IMDG tool and presents the features which make so many companies choose it over other similar solutions. Furthermore, Rafał will provide details with regards to the Hazelcast-OpenShift integration. … Continue reading Hazelcast – Using In-Memory Key-Value Stores
Introduction to in-memory computing with Hazelcast IMDG (operational data store) and Hazelcast Jet (ultrafast stream & batch processing) Traditional data stores and even NoSQL solutions are increasingly unable to meet low latency and scale requirements of cloud native architectures. In-memory data grids (IMDGs), a phenom of the application development world, have arisen as a key stack component of modern applications. Learn about the number one open source and fastest IMDG in the market and their plans for extending into event stream processing with their new open source project Hazelcast Jet.
Stuck In A Rut... Java Mission Control Open Sourced - Flight Recorder JEP Continuous Delivery Kubernetes Istio No more Apache Maven Releases - only SNAPSHOTs, into Docker images. Why scale? Maven Plugins and compile time code generation Jepsen analysis of Hazelcast 3.8.3 Why I’m leaving open source
Σε αυτό επεισόδιο συζητάμε με το Βασίλη Μπεκιάρη, μηχανικό στην Hazelcast, για τα κατανεμημένα συστήματα δεδομένων. Τα συστήματα δεδομένων είναι στο πηρύνα κάθε εφαρμογής. Συζητάμε τι είναι το CAP Theorem, πώς διαλέγουμε σύστημα, τι είναι τα key value stores, message queues, caches, document databases. Πώς διαλέγουμε ένα σύστημα και βάση ποιων παραμέτρων. Ποια είναι η hazelcast και πώς είναι να δουλεύεις remotely για μια τέτοια εταιρία.
What a strange omission, of all the concepts, one that all of us should always have is Caching. We have used it (and most likely we have been burned by it). Come and take a listen on how to correctly (or at least not as incorrectly) think about caching, finding out your "game plan", and using JSR-107, or Hazelcast, or Apache Ignite or Spring. LRU? Time-based? How much memory? Long distribution tails? cacheable keys? All concepts that you should ask before creating/using a cache! Don't forget to SUBSCRIBE to our cool new NewsCast! Java Off Heap Introduction to JCache Guava Caching Apache Ignite Hazelcast Spring JSR-107 annotations Support Do you like the episodes? Want more? Help us out! Buy us a beer! And Follow us! @fguime and @bobpaulin
Další díl byl spíše technicky zaměřený a věnovali jsme se in-memory gridu Hazelcast, o kterém jsme se bavili s Jaromírem Hamalou a Vladimírem Schreinerem, kteří na této technologií pracují. Někdo by si mohl řící, že Hazelcast je obyčejná cache, ale to je jenom jede z use casu. Povídali jsme si o CAP principle, distribuci kódu k datům a dalších vychytávkách. Po Filemonovsku jsme zabrousili do fungování remote firmy, stock options a dalších detailů. Koukněte na hazelcast.org, stáhněte si jeden JAR a Hazelcast vyzkoušejte Pokud vás zaujal Hazelcast Jet, distribuovaný data processing framework? Pište Vladimírovi: vladimir@hazelcast.com Chcete se k nám přidat? Pište Járovi na jaromir@hazelcast.com
In this episode I'm joined by Viktor Gamov from the company Hazelcast where we discuss in-memory data grids, or in particular, Hazelcast. You'll learn everything from how Hazelcast is scaled, to how or why Hazelcast works so well for certain tasks. If you have any questions for the speakers, send them to advocates@couchbase.com.
+ Юбилейный подкаст + Гость подкаста Viktor Gamov // https://twitter.com/gamussa+ Два слова про Hazelcast+ Танцы вокруг Split Brain в Hazelcast+ Лицензирование Hazelcast + http://hazelcast.org/learn/+ https://hazelcast.com/resources/+ http://asciidoctor.org Новые темы для выпусков тут http://bit.ly/TAOPgitПодписаться на подкаст через iTunes http://bit.ly/TAOPiTunesПодписаться на подкаст по RSS без iTunes http://bit.ly/TAOPrss
Виктор Гамов карьеру инженера начинал в Сбербанке России (2006). В 2009-2014 годах сотрудничал с компанией Farata Systems, принимая участие в проектах SuranceBay, AVAcorp, iTB Holdings Inc., Goldman Sachs, Citi и ENSO Financial Analytics. С декабря 2014 года — Solution Architect в Hazelcast (in-memory база данных). Farata Systems vs. Hazelcast: отличия в работе. Роль Solution Architect в Hazelcast. Всё о технологиях Hazelcast. Open source и его будущее. О написании книг и подкастинге.
As a developer, we probably spend most of our time figuring out what went wrong. Debugging really an art, and we sometimes get intimidated by it. Well, if you ever found a bug that has trying to scare you, never fear! Bob and I walk through how to become a master debugger and just Zap those bugs away! Don't forget to SUBSCRIBE to our NewsCast Java Off Heap We thank Hazelcast for sponsoring the show! If you need a distributed implementation of the Java collections, no need to look further than Hazelcast! Follow Me on Twitter! (@fguime) (thanks!) Man, summer is over! As our side of the earth tilts away from the sun, how about keeping us warm and comfy by sending us a beer?
You always hear about it, Spring MVC this, Spring MVC that, wondering what really happens under the hood. Well, wonder no more! In this episode we break up and analyze Spring MVC to the core, so that you know exactly what happens! Taking it from the last episode (JavaEE), we push forward to how modern software development happens today! Don't forget to SUBSCRIBE to our NewsCast Java Off Heap We thank Codeship for being a Sponsor of the show! Need Continuous Delivery made simple? Check Codeship.com! And use code JAVAPUB20 for a 20% discount! Now with Organizations! We also thank Hazelcast for sponsoring the show! If you need a distributed implementation of the Java collections, no need to look further than Hazelcast! Spring MVC Step by Step Web MVC Framework Spring MVC Tutorial Follow Me on Twitter! (@fguime) (thanks!) How about a summer shandy?
So let's try to understand this Java EE World, shall we? Going from the very basic request, we unravel the magic that a Java EE Container creates. When we see the tricks behind the wall, it suddenly looks a lot like SE with some sprinkled web stuff on top! If you want to really know what happens every time you go to a browser and type http://, you should hear this podcast! Don't forget to SUBSCRIBE to our NewsCast Java Off Heap We thank Codeship for being a Sponsor of the show! Need Continuous Delivery made simple? Check Codeship.com! And use code JAVAPUB20 for a 20% discount! We also thank Hazelcast for sponsoring the show! If you need a distributed implementation of the Java collections, no need to look further than Hazelcast! Links Java EE Containers HTTP Servlets request/response Java EE Implementations Follow Me on Twitter! (@fguime) (thanks!) Ok, so now is allergy season, and I heard beer with honey is good for you. Or better yet, beer made of honey (Mead!)
Unsupported Operation 67JavaOracle pulls support for JavaFX ScriptJava 7u4b15 developer preview availableMiscDataStax has quietly made their Cassandra documentation available in PDFExcelTestNG - interesting - webdriver/selenium testing driven by Excel spreadsheets, and TestNG.Practical Unit Testing with Mockito and TestNG is nearing publication - now has an ISBN!LogBack 1.0.1Hibernate 4.1Hazelcast 2.0 released - release notes.AIDE - IDE for Android, ON AndroidTerminal-IDE is similar, but gives you a vi based environment.SmartGIT 3.0.1 available - changes - GUI Git client in Java. now supports mercurial and svn since I last checked it out.Gerrit 2.3rc0 availableAtlassian buys an IRC/IM client/server company - closes a 7 year ticket “won’t fix”Web StuffNettoSphere - A WebSocket and HTTP server based on Atmosphere and Netty.vert.x - node.js like asynchronous web server/platform - lets you write applications in js, ruby, and java. comes with distributed event bus, websocket support, tcp/ssl, pre made modules for mailer, authentication, work queuesThymeleaf 2.0 - XML/HTML specific template engine.GateIN 3.2.0 Final - people still use portal servers?JRebel 4.6 released, JRebel for Vaadin announcedApache / Maven / RelatedShavenmaven - super-lightweight dependency management - NO XML - just URLsGrails 2.0.1 now uses RichardStyle composites, and hopefully will make its way to “Apache Maven Central” soon.Apache Jena 0.9.0 - Java framework for building Semantic WebCommons Math 3.0Apache Camel 2.9.1Apache Hama 0.4 - incubating - metrics on HadoopApache Rave 0.8 - incubating - social mashupApache Tomcat Native 1.1.23Apache Ant 1.8.3Directory studio 2.0.M3ApacheDS 2.0.0-M6Apache Directory LDAP 1.0.0-M11Apache Commons Daemon 1.0.10Apache ACE has become a top level projectApache OFBiz 09.04.02 (2nd TLD in a month - DeltaCloud was the other)Apache MyFaces extension for CDI 1.0.4JetbrainsIntelliJ IDEA 11.1 to support JavaScript.next with Traceur compiler.AppCode 1.5 RCGroovyFirst official GroovyFX releaseScalaAkka moved to a new Akka Organisation on GithubAkka 2.0 also released!New Scala proposal for value typesClojureClojure 1.4 beta 4First Github got hacked, then node.js’s NPM, Clojars takes precautions:Hello folks!In light of the recent break-in to the Node.js package hosting site (https://gist.github.com/2001456), I’ve decided to bump the priority of increasing the security on Clojars. I’ve deployed a fix that uses bcrypt (http://codahale.com/how-to-safely-store-a-password/) for password hashing. The first time you log in, it will re-hash your password using bcrypt and wipe the old weak hash.Note that Clojars has NOT had a security breach at this time. This is a preventative measure to protect your password in the event of a future breach. We are also looking into allowing signed jars (and possibly requiring them for releases). If you’re interested in helping out with this effort, (design or code) please join the clojars-maintainers mailing list: http://groups.google.com/group/clojars-maintainersBecause we can’t ensure that everyone will log in to re-hash their password, at some point in the future (probably 2–3 weeks out) we will WIPE all the old password hashes. Otherwise users who have stopped using Clojars or missed the announcement could have their passwords exposed in the event of a future break-in. I will be sure to send out a few more warnings before this happens, but even if your password has been wiped it’s easy to reset it via the “forgot password” functionality.If you have any applications storing passwords hashed with SHA1 (even if you use a salt) I highly recommend you take the same steps; refer to http://codahale.com/how-to-safely-store-a-password/ for details.please log into Clojars to re-hash your password.Thanks for your attention.-PhilRelated news - Bouncy Castle 1.46 releasedStatic code analyzer for Clojure - kibit 0.0.2 now releasedMarginalia v0.7.0 - documentation generator for clojurelein 2.0 preview releases are out, and now preview2 is supported by Travis-CIlein-navem is a lein plugin that converts a maven pom.xml into lein project.cljDatomic is a new database service from Rich Hickey. And dayam it looks nice. Some really nice ideas in here.