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Joaquin Ruiz's blog

Caching Services Scale Clouds

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Just a few years ago, when big sites like Facebook or Netflix were building out their delivery networks to customers, they would build data centers near major internet hubs. That meant setting up shop in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Washington, and New York, as well as at international hubs like London, Madrid, and Tokyo. As long as the data center was close to major population centers, people could get service pretty rapidly.

Lessons Learned from Platform Wars

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Earlier this month, HP and Microsoft kicked off 2010 (perhaps this will be the “Year of the Cloud”) with a pact to invest $250M towards cloud computing services. In other words, they’re teaming up so as to remain relevant in the cloud age… and, of course, to compete with their perpetual nemesis, IBM.

The Web 2.0 World Built By Memcached

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Whether you like the term "Web 2.0" or not, everything it implies — the Web as a platform for user-generated content, information sharing, collaboration — would not be possible without one cornerstone technology: Memcached.

Think about it.

Memcached was released in October 2003 by Djanga Interactive to scale LiveJournal. Tim O'Reilly and John Battelle presented their definition of Web 2.0 at the first Web 2.0 conference a year later (their definition is published here).

Memcached Tools

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We’ve talked in previous posts about Memcached and the rise of the Dynamic Web. One of the issues we’ve encountered as developers of the only high availability distribution of Memcached is the lack of a solid tool set for Memcached.

The New Web Caching Tier

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Previously, I wrote about the Rise of The Dynamic Web and how the build up of dynamic content, social linkages, and increasing usage is putting a strain on origin site data centers, adversely affecting performance and page loading.

The Rise of the Dynamic Web

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By Joaquin Ruiz

As recent as a couple of years ago, the Web was markedly different. Then, business traffic dominated the Web, and users were online to find information (largely from sites with static content) and engage in e-commerce. That’s completely changed now thanks to a combination of forces: consumer dominance, speed of access and mobility, and the rise of dynamic content, applications and activity.

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