Not this particular one, but I did a presentation for BDW which was 90% the
same message and the video is here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0zg01NDCXYg

Just reshuffled the content a bit.

G>


On Fri, Nov 3, 2017 at 3:32 PM, Michael Crawford <
[email protected]> wrote:

> Any chance your talk was recorded?
>
> Thanks,
> Mike
>
>
> > On Oct 29, 2017, at 6:29 AM, Gerard Toonstra <[email protected]>
> wrote:
> >
> > Hi all,
> >
> > Thursday the 26/10 my employer Coolblue organized a "Behind the Scenes"
> > event. It is an opportunity for engineers to talk about stuff they work
> on
> > and usually they provide two presentations.
> >
> > This event was about BigData and Processing. As (now) team lead of Data
> > Platform, I decided to talk about Apache Airflow, which we are now in the
> > process of migrating to (from Azkaban).
> >
> > Here are the slides:
> >
> > https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:6330346647347875840
> >
> > It is a technical presentation, aimed at informing people who are new to
> > Airflow what the underlying architecture is and also presenting the why
> > you'd want to use it in the first place. I based the architectural
> diagrams
> > on AWS on the PoC we did some time.
> >
> > Important takeaway:
> >
> > Airflow is built around some great design principles, which are the
> result
> > of important insights into data processing. These principles result in a
> > tool, when used correctly according to these principles, to reduce the
> ETL
> > effort and maintenance and make time to work on higher level intelligent
> > work like Machine Learning, Deep Learning and analysis of your data.
> >
> > It is very similar to the talk I gave at BigData Week London 2017:
> >
> > https://youtu.be/Ch2AQhOhefw
> >
> > Rgds,
> >
> > Gerard
>
>

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