> > In addition, what catches my attention is their mechanism in resilient to > fault as they state messages are passed to each other in a distributed way. >
Yes this is interesting. Actually we can do this, too. What if we had a deamon job that uses a kind of serialize printing to determine if a host is responsive from each other host? 2011/8/10 ChiaHung Lin <[email protected]> > It seems that the storm platform is designed to be stateless and the > communication between units is through thrift, so ideally the platform can > perform arbitrary computation and low cost maintenance. In addition, what > catches my attention is their mechanism in resilient to fault as they state > messages are passed to each other in a distributed way. That would be > interesting to know more tech detail on how they handle those issues. > > -----Original message----- > From:Edward J. Yoon <[email protected]> > To:[email protected] > Date:Tue, 9 Aug 2011 09:54:42 +0900 > Subject:Twitter Storm? > > Have you seen this news article? > > http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/08/05/idUS250289487220110805 > > -- > Best Regards, Edward J. Yoon > @eddieyoon > > > -- > ChiaHung Lin > Department of Information Management > National University of Kaohsiung > Taiwan > -- Thomas Jungblut Berlin mobile: 0170-3081070 business: [email protected] private: [email protected]
