Fri.Jun 29, 2018

article thumbnail

The Benefits of Software Architecture: Hierarchical Digital Twins

ScaleOut Software

By Dr. William L. Bain. Attending technical conferences creates the opportunity to step away from focusing on day-to-day concerns and reflect more deeply about the key principles that guide our work. Having just concluded participation in another In-Memory Computing Summit , it has become even more clear to me that the key to mainstream adoption of in-memory computing software platforms is architecture — the root of a platform’s value to applications.

article thumbnail

Stuff The Internet Says On Scalability For June 29th, 2018

High Scalability

Hey, it's HighScalability time: Rockets. They're big. You won't believe how really really big they are. ( Corridor Crew ). Do you like this sort of Stuff? Please lend me your support on Patreon. It would mean a great deal to me. And if you know anyone looking for a simple book that uses lots of pictures and lots of examples to explain the cloud, then please recommend my new book: Explain the Cloud Like I'm 10.

Internet 131
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

The Benefits of Software Architecture: Hierarchical Digital Twins

ScaleOut Software

By Dr. William L. Bain. Attending technical conferences creates the opportunity to step away from focusing on day-to-day concerns and reflect more deeply about the key principles that guide our work. Having just concluded participation in another In-Memory Computing Summit , it has become even more clear to me that the key to mainstream adoption of in-memory computing software platforms is architecture — the root of a platform’s value to applications.

article thumbnail

Evaluating the Evaluation: A Benchmarking Checklist

Brendan Gregg

A co-worker introduced me to Craig Hanson and Pat Crain's performance mantras, which neatly summarize much of what we do in performance analysis and tuning. They are: **Performance mantras**. Don't do it. Do it, but don't do it again. Do it less. Do it later. Do it when they're not looking. Do it concurrently. Do it cheaper. These have inspired me to summarize another performance activity: evaluating benchmark accuracy.