en

Martin Kleppmann

  • b9449300348has quoted2 years ago
    CPU clock speeds are barely increasing, but multi-core processors are stand
  • Hyeonsoo Shinhas quoted3 months ago
    We call an application data-intensive if data is its primary challenge—the quantity of data, the complexity of data, or the speed at which it is changing—as opposed to compute-intensive, where CPU cycles are the bottleneck
  • Hyeonsoo Shinhas quoted3 months ago
    A fault is usually defined as one component of the system deviating from its spec, whereas a failure is when the system as a whole stops providing the required service to the user
  • Hyeonsoo Shinhas quoted2 months ago
    Operability
    Make it easy for operations teams to keep the system running smoothly.
    Simplicity
    Make it easy for new engineers to understand the system, by removing as much complexity as possible from the system. (Note this is not the same as simplicity of the user interface.)
    Evolvability
    Make it easy for engineers to make changes to the system in the future, adapting it for unanticipated use cases as requirements change. Also known as extensibility, modifiability, or plasticity.
  • Hyeonsoo Shinhas quoted2 months ago
    One of the best tools we have for removing accidental complexity is abstraction. A good abstraction can hide a great deal of implementation detail behind a clean, simple-to-understand façade. A good abstraction can also be used for a wide range of different applications. Not only is this reuse more efficient than reimplementing a similar thing multiple times, but it also leads to higher-quality software, as quality improvements in the abstracted component benefit all applications that use it
  • Samson Mwathihas quotedlast year
    Many applications today are data-intensive , as opposed to compute-intensive
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