Posts tagged scalability

Hot Scalability Links For Sep 3, 2010

4445033397 d4e4c2b8cb m Hot Scalability Links For Sep 3, 2010

 With summer almost gone, it’s time to fall into some good links…

  • Hibari – distributed, fault tolerant, highly available key-value store written in Erlang. In this video Scott Lystig Fritchie gives a very good overview of the newest key-value store. 
  • Tweets of Gold
    • lenidot: with 12 staff, @tumblr serves 1.5billion pageviews/month and 25,000 signups/day. Now that’s scalability!
    • jmtan24: Funny that whenever a high scalability article comes out, it always mention the shared nothing approach
    • mfeathers: When life gives you lemons, you can have decades-long conquest to convert lemons to oranges, or you can make lemonade.
    • OyvindIsene: Met an old man with mustache today, he had no opinion on #noSQL. Note to myself: Don’t grow a mustache, now or later. 
    • vlad003: Isn’t it interesting how P2P distributes data while Cloud Computing centralizes it? And they’re both said to be the future.
  • You may be interested in a new DevOps Meetup organized by Dave Nielson, so you know it will be good.

 Hot Scalability Links For Sep 3, 2010
 Hot Scalability Links For Sep 3, 2010

 Hot Scalability Links For Sep 3, 2010  Hot Scalability Links For Sep 3, 2010

 Hot Scalability Links For Sep 3, 2010



Google Analytics: upcoming system upgrade for greater scalability & reliability

analyticsicon Google Analytics: upcoming system upgrade for greater scalability & reliability
Within the next two weeks, Google Analytics will be performing a system upgrade. This upgrade is to further improve the scalability and reliability of Google Analytics to meet the demand of the increasing number of enterprises using Google Analytics.

Rest assured your website traffic data will be unaffected and there will be no interruption to data collection or processing. All reports will be available and accessible to users. However, for some limited hours, users will not be able to perform administrative account actions such as opening new accounts, creating or modifying profiles, setting up filters and goals and managing user access etc.

The specific system upgrade times will be posted in the Google Analytics administrative interface. If you anticipate a need to make account changes during the next two weeks we encourage you to make them as soon as possible to ensure smooth operations during the system upgrade.

We are proud to see the continued growth in Google Analytics and are committed to delivering the unparalleled reliability and scalability that users have come to expect from products running on Google?s globally renowned infrastructure.

P.S. Google Website Optimiser will also be undergoing a system upgrade. All running experiments will continue to run and collect data. However, users will be unable to create or modify experiments.

Posted by Dai Pham, Google Analytics Team

 Google Analytics: upcoming system upgrade for greater scalability & reliability




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