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Pablo Lalloni

The HDF Group - Why use HDF? - 0 views

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    "HDF (Hierarchical Data Format) technologies are relevant when the data challenges being faced push the limits of what can be addressed by traditional database systems, XML documents, or in-house data formats. Leveraging the powerful HDF products and the expertise of The HDF Group, organizations realize substantial cost savings while solving challenges that seemed intractable using other data management technologies. Many HDF adopters have very large datasets, very fast access requirements, or very complex datasets. Others turn to HDF because it allows them to easily share data across a wide variety of computational platforms using applications written in different programming languages. Some use HDF to take advantage of the many open-source and commercial tools that understand HDF. Similar to XML documents, HDF files are self-describing and allow users to specify complex data relationships and dependencies. In contrast to XML documents, HDF files can contain binary data (in many representations) and allow direct access to parts of the file without first parsing the entire contents. HDF, not surprisingly, allows hierarchical data objects to be expressed in a very natural manner, in contrast to the tables of relational database. Whereas relational databases support tables, HDF supports n-dimensional datasets and each element in the dataset may itself be a complex object. Relational databases offer excellent support for queries based on field matching, but are not well-suited for sequentially processing all records in the database or for subsetting the data based on coordinate-style lookup."
Pablo Lalloni

cloudera/cdk - 0 views

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    "The Cloudera Development Kit, or CDK for short, is a set of libraries, tools, examples, and documentation focused on making it easier to build systems on top of the Hadoop ecosystem. The goals of the CDK are: Codify expert patterns and practices for building data-oriented systems and applications. Let developers focus on business logic, not plumbing or infrastructure. Provide smart defaults for platform choices. Support piecemeal adoption via loosely-coupled modules."
Pablo Lalloni

OASIS Open CSA | Advancing open standards that simplify SOA application development - 0 views

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    "The OASIS Open Composite Services Architecture (CSA) Member Section advances open standards that simplify SOA application development. Open CSA brings together vendors and users from around the world to collaborate on the further development and adoption of the Service Component Architecture (SCA) and Service Data Objects (SDO) families of specifications."
Pablo Lalloni

Let's Encrypt - Free SSL/TLS Certificates - 0 views

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    "Let's Encrypt is a free, automated, and open certificate authority (CA), run for the public's benefit. Let's Encrypt is a service provided by the Internet Security Research Group (ISRG). The key principles behind Let's Encrypt are: Free: Anyone who owns a domain name can use Let's Encrypt to obtain a trusted certificate at zero cost. Automatic: Software running on a web server can interact with Let's Encrypt to painlessly obtain a certificate, securely configure it for use, and automatically take care of renewal. Secure: Let's Encrypt will serve as a platform for advancing TLS security best practices, both on the CA side and by helping site operators properly secure their servers. Transparent: All certificates issued or revoked will be publicly recorded and available for anyone to inspect. Open: The automatic issuance and renewal protocol will be published as an open standard that others can adopt. Cooperative: Much like the underlying Internet protocols themselves, Let's Encrypt is a joint effort to benefit the community, beyond the control of any one organization."
Pablo Lalloni

InfoQ: How We (Mostly) Moved from Java to Scala - 1 views

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    Graham Tackley discusses how The Guardian switched all new development from Java to Scala, why they did that, what were the benefits and the problems, and why they did not choose Python+Django.
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