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The "Hbase/PoweredBy" page has been changed by KenWeiner.
The comment on this change is: Changed GumGum to BEDROCK (recently spun out of 
GumGum).
http://wiki.apache.org/hadoop/Hbase/PoweredBy?action=diff&rev1=38&rev2=39

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  [[http://www.adobe.com|Adobe]] - We currently have about 30 nodes running 
HDFS, Hadoop and HBase  in clusters ranging from 5 to 14 nodes on both 
production and development. We plan a deployment on an 80 nodes cluster. We are 
using HBase in several areas from social services to structured data and 
processing for internal use. We constantly write data to HBase and run 
mapreduce jobs to process then store it back to HBase or external systems. Our 
production cluster has been running since Oct 2008.
+ 
+ [[http://www.bedrock.com|BEDROCK]] is a monetization platform for building 
the next generation of ad products. We use HBase 0.20.0 on a 4-node Amazon EC2 
Large Instance (m1.large) cluster for both real-time data and analytics. Our 
production cluster has been running since July 2009.
  
  [[http://www.flurry.com|Flurry]] provides mobile application analytics.  We 
use HBase and Hadoop for all of our analytics processing, and serve all of our 
live requests directly out of HBase on our 16-node production cluster with 
billions of rows over several tables.
  
  [[http://www.drawntoscaleconsulting.com|Drawn to Scale Consulting]] consults 
on HBase, Hadoop, Distributed Search, and Scalable architectures.
- 
- [[http://gumgum.com|GumGum]] is an analytics and monetization platform for 
online content. We've developed usage-based licensing models that make the best 
content in the world accessible to publishers of all sizes.  We use HBase 
0.20.0 on a 4-node Amazon EC2 cluster to record visits to advertisers in our ad 
network. Our production cluster has been running since July 2009.
  
  [[http://www.mahalo.com|Mahalo]], "...the world's first human-powered search 
engine". All the markup that powers the wiki is stored in HBase. It's been in 
use for a few months now. !MediaWiki - the same software that power Wikipedia - 
has version/revision control. Mahalo's in-house editors produce a lot of 
revisions per day, which was not working well in a RDBMS. An hbase-based 
solution for this was built and tested, and the data migrated out of MySQL and 
into HBase. Right now it's at something like 6 million items in HBase. The 
upload tool runs every hour from a shell script to back up that data, and on 6 
nodes takes about 5-10 minutes to run - and does not slow down production at 
all.
  

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