You’ve asked a lot of questions on this mailing list, and you’ve gotten help on 
a ton of beginner issues.  Making fun of someone for asking similar beginner 
questions is not cool at all.  Cut it out.



> On Nov 14, 2016, at 10:13 AM, Ali Akhtar <ali.rac...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Another solution could be to print the raw bytes to paper, and write the page 
> numbers to cassandra. Playback will be challenging with this method however, 
> unless interns are available to transcribe the papers back to a digital 
> format.
> 
> On Mon, Nov 14, 2016 at 11:06 PM, Ali Akhtar <ali.rac...@gmail.com 
> <mailto:ali.rac...@gmail.com>> wrote:
> The video can be written to floppy diskettes, and the serial numbers of the 
> diskettes can be written to cassandra.
> 
> On Mon, Nov 14, 2016 at 11:00 PM, Oskar Kjellin <oskar.kjel...@gmail.com 
> <mailto:oskar.kjel...@gmail.com>> wrote:
> The actual video is not stored in Cassandra. You need to use a proper origin 
> like s3.
> 
> Although you can probably store it in Cassandra, it's not a good idea.
> 
> Sent from my iPhone
> 
> > On 14 nov. 2016, at 18:02, raghavendra vutti <raghu9raghaven...@gmail.com 
> > <mailto:raghu9raghaven...@gmail.com>> wrote:
> >
> > Hi,
> >
> >  Just wanted to know How does hulu or netflix store videos in cassandra.
> >
> > Do they just use references to the video files in the form of URL's and 
> > store in the DB??
> >
> > could someone please me on this.
> >
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Raghavendra.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> 
> 

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