…will also get commercial support with Revolution R Enterprise 5.0 Server for Linux.
You can read more about this announcement on:
Original title and link: R and Hadoop: Revolution Analytics and Cloudera Partnership Announced ( NoSQL database ©myNoSQL)
…MinGW. Solaris 121 and later using GCC toolchain. Linux 2.6 or better using the GCC toolchain. Macinotsh Darwin using the GCC or XCode toolchain. It is known to work on the BSDs but we do not check the build regularly.
In addition to Node v0.5, a number of projects have begun to use libuv :
Mozilla's Rust
Tim Caswell's LuaNode
Ben Noordhuis and Bert Belder's Phode async PHP project
Kerry Snyder's libuv-csharp …
…and makes it safer and more efficient for enterprises to use. It does this providing support for Linux HA, support for random read/write storage (or the ability to overwrite data) and a native network framework system. The NFS was created by running Hadoop on top of MapR's storage system, as opposed to Linux.
If we are adding to this Yahoo's spinoff focused on Hadoop, HortonWorks , I think it's quite safe to conclude that we will see a lot of interesting things …
…locally without Azure SDK and deployed to staging in Rackspace Cloud. " If a get a spare bit of time, I'll try to push some work in Lokad.CQRS just to be able to continue the phrase some time later: " oh, and the last deployment went to Linux ".
Once again, Vienna was awesome (even though I didn't get to see the city in the daylight :) Thanks to everybody who helped to make it this way.
…vs 1kg). Battery seems to last for the work day. OSX feels like a polished Linux system with the ability to go all the way back to bash from the start.
We'll see, how it goes. However, right now I'm in pretty good shape to be able to stay productive and available on some travels and outdoor activities (MBA replaces iPad here). More than that, I might even be able to do some development on it. That should come in handy for the conference presentations within the next weeks. If everything …
…folder cannot be executed because the downloaded SDK is for Mac OSX not Linux, you need to download Linux version of AIR SDK from http://kb2.adobe.com/cps/853/cpsid_85304.html and copy the the Linux version adl over to /opt/flex/bin)
Install AIR SDK on Ubuntu 10.10 ( 64-bit):
http://www.jamesward.com/2010/10/14/install-adobe-air-on-64-bit-ubuntu-10-10/
Debug Configuration:
How To: Install Adobe AIR in 64-bit Linux Mint http://forums.linuxmint.com/viewtopic.php?f=42&t=74523 …
…started suffering from fragmentation. We tried different things to fix the problem, but basically the Linux default allocator in glibc sucks really, really hard.
Including jemalloc inside of Redis (no need to have it installed in your computer, just download the Redis tarball as usually and type make) was a huge win. Every single case of fragmentation in real world systems was fixed by this change, and also the amount of memory used dropped a bit.
So now we build on Linux using Jemalloc…
…inux, but also includes the services you run — M ySQL and A pache. But there you go, the entire LAMP stack is fubar'd.
Anyone could argue that it's possible to e.g. run PHP4 on a recent Linux with semi-recent components, but let alone compiling PHP and/or backporting patches for security issues and crucial bugfixes don't make maintainance exactly trivial.
Continue reading "Legacy code"
…of these comparisons were performed on the exact same machine, a fairly basic 2- CPU Linux server with 4G of RAM , mid-range SATA disks, and so on — a fairly typical commodity system. Note that this set of tests are not intended to provide useful absolute numbers for either database, but rather to allow some preliminary comparisons between the two. We tried to be as fair as possible. For instance, InnoDB was given an independent disk for its journaling.
The first comparison was a …
A super-computer architecture that crunches big data for banks, police, and spooks will soon be open sourced as a super-fast alternative to the Googlesque Hadoop.
LexisNexis Risk Solutions is opening up its High Performance Computing Cluster ( HPCC), a system written in C++ that it claims is four-times faster than Hadoop when running data-intensive queries on ordinary Linux servers.