Re: A proposal for creating a Knowledge Sharing Hub for Apache Spark Community

2024-03-20 Thread Kiran Kumar Dusi
+1

On Thu, 21 Mar 2024 at 7:46 AM, Farshid Ashouri 
wrote:

> +1
>
> On Mon, 18 Mar 2024, 11:00 Mich Talebzadeh, 
> wrote:
>
>> Some of you may be aware that Databricks community Home | Databricks
>> have just launched a knowledge sharing hub. I thought it would be a
>> good idea for the Apache Spark user group to have the same, especially
>> for repeat questions on Spark core, Spark SQL, Spark Structured
>> Streaming, Spark Mlib and so forth.
>>
>> Apache Spark user and dev groups have been around for a good while.
>> They are serving their purpose . We went through creating a slack
>> community that managed to create more more heat than light.. This is
>> what Databricks community came up with and I quote
>>
>> "Knowledge Sharing Hub
>> Dive into a collaborative space where members like YOU can exchange
>> knowledge, tips, and best practices. Join the conversation today and
>> unlock a wealth of collective wisdom to enhance your experience and
>> drive success."
>>
>> I don't know the logistics of setting it up.but I am sure that should
>> not be that difficult. If anyone is supportive of this proposal, let
>> the usual +1, 0, -1 decide
>>
>> HTH
>>
>> Mich Talebzadeh,
>> Dad | Technologist | Solutions Architect | Engineer
>> London
>> United Kingdom
>>
>>
>>view my Linkedin profile
>>
>>
>>  https://en.everybodywiki.com/Mich_Talebzadeh
>>
>>
>>
>> Disclaimer: The information provided is correct to the best of my
>> knowledge but of course cannot be guaranteed . It is essential to note
>> that, as with any advice, quote "one test result is worth one-thousand
>> expert opinions (Werner Von Braun)".
>>
>> -
>> To unsubscribe e-mail: user-unsubscr...@spark.apache.org
>>
>>


Re: A proposal for creating a Knowledge Sharing Hub for Apache Spark Community

2024-03-20 Thread Farshid Ashouri
+1

On Mon, 18 Mar 2024, 11:00 Mich Talebzadeh, 
wrote:

> Some of you may be aware that Databricks community Home | Databricks
> have just launched a knowledge sharing hub. I thought it would be a
> good idea for the Apache Spark user group to have the same, especially
> for repeat questions on Spark core, Spark SQL, Spark Structured
> Streaming, Spark Mlib and so forth.
>
> Apache Spark user and dev groups have been around for a good while.
> They are serving their purpose . We went through creating a slack
> community that managed to create more more heat than light.. This is
> what Databricks community came up with and I quote
>
> "Knowledge Sharing Hub
> Dive into a collaborative space where members like YOU can exchange
> knowledge, tips, and best practices. Join the conversation today and
> unlock a wealth of collective wisdom to enhance your experience and
> drive success."
>
> I don't know the logistics of setting it up.but I am sure that should
> not be that difficult. If anyone is supportive of this proposal, let
> the usual +1, 0, -1 decide
>
> HTH
>
> Mich Talebzadeh,
> Dad | Technologist | Solutions Architect | Engineer
> London
> United Kingdom
>
>
>view my Linkedin profile
>
>
>  https://en.everybodywiki.com/Mich_Talebzadeh
>
>
>
> Disclaimer: The information provided is correct to the best of my
> knowledge but of course cannot be guaranteed . It is essential to note
> that, as with any advice, quote "one test result is worth one-thousand
> expert opinions (Werner Von Braun)".
>
> -
> To unsubscribe e-mail: user-unsubscr...@spark.apache.org
>
>


Announcing the Community Over Code 2024 Streaming Track

2024-03-20 Thread James Hughes
Hi all,

Community Over Code , the ASF conference,
will be held in Denver, Colorado,

October 7-10, 2024. The call for presentations

is open now through April 15, 2024.  (This is two months earlier than last
year!)

I am one of the co-chairs for the stream processing track, and we would
love to see you there and hope that you will consider submitting a talk.

About the Streaming track:

There are many top-level ASF projects which focus on and push the envelope
for stream and event processing.  ActiveMQ, Beam, Bookkeeper, Camel, Flink,
Kafka, Pulsar, RocketMQ, and Spark are all house-hold names in the stream
processing and analytics world at this point.  These projects show that
stream processing has unique characteristics requiring deep expertise.  On
the other hand, users need easy to apply solutions.  The streaming track
will host talks focused on the use cases and advances of these projects as
well as other developments in the streaming world.

Thanks and see you in October!

Jim