Archive for February 2021

Week 8, year 2021

  • Why Partial<Type> is an extremely useful TypeScript feature? - If TypeScript were a friend of mine on Facebook, then I’d mark our relation as complicated. It’s a history of love & hate, or rather hate… [Event-Driven by Oskar Dudycz]
  • OpenTelemetry 1.0 Extensions Released - With the release of OpenTelemetry tracing specification reaching 1.0, and the subsequent release of the 1.0 release of the core components of .NET, I've pushed updates to my OpenTelemetry packages for: NServiceBus.Extensions.Diagnostics.OpenTelemetry MongoDB.Driver.Core.Extensions.OpenTelemetry While those packages didn't really change much, one [Jimmy Bogard]
  • Speed Matters - More than 20 years ago my team and I were working with my client on a web application. It was still 1999, so the dot-com bubble had not yet burst, but it would begin to weaken only five months or so into Y2K. And to think that everyone was concerned about worldwide computer failures at … Speed Matters Read More » The post Speed Matters appeared first on Kalele. [Kalele]
Permalink | From 22 February 2021 to 28 February 2021 | Last updated on: Sat, 7 May 2022 15:28:32 GMT

Week 7, year 2021

  • Engineering dependability and fault tolerance in a distributed system - This is a guest post by Paddy Byers, Co-founder and CTO at Ably, a realtime data delivery platform. You can view the original article on Ably's blog. Users need to know that they can depend on the service that is provided to them. In practice, because from time to time individual elements will inevitably fail, this means you have to be able to continue in spite of those failures. In this article, we discuss the concepts of dependability and fault tolerance in detail and explain how the Ably platform is designed with fault tolerant approaches to uphold its dependability guarantees. As a basis for that discussion, first some definitions: Dependability The degree to which a product or service can be relied upon. [High Scalability]
  • Sponsored Post - 3T, Bridgecrew, Toptal, IP2Location, Ipdata, StackHawk, InterviewCamp.io, Educative, Triplebyte, Stream, Fauna [High Scalability]
  • Benchmark (YCSB) numbers for Redis, MongoDB, Couchbase2, Yugabyte and BangDB - This is guest post by Sachin Sinha who is passionate about data, analytics and machine learning at scale. Author & founder of BangDB. This article is to simply report the YCSB bench test results in detail for five NoSQL databases namely Redis, MongoDB, Couchbase, Yugabyte and BangDB and compare the result side by side. I have used latest versions for each NoSQL DB and have followed the recommendations to run all the databases in optimized conditions. I have also used the default six test scenarios as defined by the YCSB framework. I have restricted it to 10M records for each test. [High Scalability]
  • How to set up a test matrix in XUnit? - Each country has the go-to place for hiding from daily struggles. In Poland, we have Bieszczady. It’s a mountain range that’s also the… [Event-Driven by Oskar Dudycz]
  • What's the difference between a command and an event? - What’s the difference between a command and an event? The answer seems apparent, but let’s see if it’s straightforward. The command… [Event-Driven by Oskar Dudycz]
  • Making Complex Topics Stick (Part 2: Composition) - A list of ingredients doesn't make a recipe. You need to know the right dosage. [The Architect Elevator]
Permalink | From 15 February 2021 to 21 February 2021 | Last updated on: Tue, 25 Oct 2022 17:09:04 GMT

Week 5, year 2021

Permalink | From 01 February 2021 to 07 February 2021 | Last updated on: Wed, 30 Jun 2021 14:03:57 GMT