Issue #135
Understanding Distributed consensus, Resharding Petabytes of Data, Kernel VS DPDK, Building Servers as it should be, Coordination is increasingly painful, Open Logic Project.
If I can stop one heart from breaking, I shall not live in vain; If I can ease one life the aching, Or cool one pain, Or help one lonely person Into happiness again I shall not live in vain. — Emily Dickinson
Posts
Let’s take a crack at understanding distributed consensus - #PreethiKasireddy
Shipping to Production - #GergelyOrosz
Chaos Engineering and Observability with Visual Metaphors - #YuryNiñoRoa #BenLinders
The What, Why, and When of Single-Table Design with DynamoDB - #AlexDebrie
Resharding Petabytes of data to improve performance for our largest customers -#ShubhitSingh
Uber’s Highly Scalable and Distributed Shuffle as a Service - #MayankBansal #BoYang #MayurBhosale #KaiJiang
Why we're sticking with Ruby on Rails - #SidSijbrandij
12 Ways to Improve Your Monolith Before Transitioning to Microservices - #TomasFernandez
Scaling our Spreadsheet Engine from Thousands to Billions of Cells - ##
Linux Kernel vs DPDK: HTTP Performance Showdown - #MarcRichards
Podcast
Oxide builds servers (as they should be) - #BryanCantrill #JerodSanto #GerhardLazu
Books
Data Wrangling with pandas, NumPy, and Jupyter
The Open Logic Project is a collection of teaching materials on mathematical logic aimed at a non-mathematical audience, intended for use in advanced logic courses as taught in many philosophy departments. It is open-source: you can download the LaTeX code. It is open: you’re free to change it whichever way you like, and share your changes.
Videos
I'm SO Glad I'm Uncoordinated: Coordination Is Increasingly Painful... What Can Be Done?
How to build distributed systems in JavaScript by Loren Sands-Ramshaw