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Site reliability engineering: 5 things you need to know

Dynatrace

Site reliability engineering (SRE) is the practice of applying software engineering principles to operations and infrastructure processes to help organizations create highly reliable and scalable software systems. ” According to Google, “SRE is what you get when you treat operations as a software problem.”

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Supercomputing Predictions: Custom CPUs, CXL3.0, and Petalith Architectures

Adrian Cockcroft

Here’s some predictions I’m making: Jack Dongarra’s efforts to highlight the low efficiency of the HPCG benchmark as an issue will influence the next generation of supercomputer architectures to optimize for sparse matrix computations. Next generation architectures will use CXL3.0 Next generation architectures will use CXL3.0

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Site reliability engineering: 5 things to you need to know

Dynatrace

Site reliability engineering (SRE) is the practice of applying software engineering principles to operations and infrastructure processes to help organizations create highly reliable and scalable software systems. ” According to Google, “SRE is what you get when you treat operations as a software problem.”

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Fast key-value stores: an idea whose time has come and gone

The Morning Paper

The stateless + RInk (S+RInK) architecture attempts to provide the best of both worlds: to simultaneously offer both the implementation and operational simplicity of stateless application servers and the performance benefits of servers caching state in RAM. What have the authors got against this combination? Who knew! ;). From RInK to LInK.

Cache 79
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Transforming enterprise integration with reactive streams

O'Reilly Software

Build a more scalable, composable, and functional architecture for interconnecting systems and applications. Anne Thomas [1] captures this very well in her article " SOA is Dead; Long Live Services ": Although the word 'SOA' is dead, the requirement for service-oriented architecture is stronger than ever. what’s the best ESB?'

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What Adrian Did Next?—?Part 2?—?Sun Microsystems

Adrian Cockcroft

I became the Sun UK local specialist in performance and hardware, and as Sun transitioned from a desktop workstation company to sell high end multiprocessor servers I was helping customers find and fix scalability problems. I also applied Six Sigma to capacity planning and presented this at a conference in 2003.

Tuning 52