Return-Path: X-Original-To: apmail-couchdb-marketing-archive@minotaur.apache.org Delivered-To: apmail-couchdb-marketing-archive@minotaur.apache.org Received: from mail.apache.org (hermes.apache.org [140.211.11.3]) by minotaur.apache.org (Postfix) with SMTP id 0F8CA10132 for ; Mon, 31 Mar 2014 08:12:19 +0000 (UTC) Received: (qmail 63316 invoked by uid 500); 31 Mar 2014 08:12:15 -0000 Delivered-To: apmail-couchdb-marketing-archive@couchdb.apache.org Received: (qmail 63259 invoked by uid 500); 31 Mar 2014 08:12:13 -0000 Mailing-List: contact marketing-help@couchdb.apache.org; run by ezmlm Precedence: bulk List-Help: List-Unsubscribe: List-Post: List-Id: Reply-To: marketing@couchdb.apache.org Delivered-To: mailing list marketing@couchdb.apache.org Delivered-To: moderator for marketing@couchdb.apache.org Received: (qmail 12083 invoked by uid 99); 31 Mar 2014 01:40:43 -0000 X-ASF-Spam-Status: No, hits=4.2 required=5.0 tests=HTML_MESSAGE,HTTP_ESCAPED_HOST,MIME_QP_LONG_LINE,RCVD_IN_DNSWL_LOW,SPF_PASS,URIBL_GREY X-Spam-Check-By: apache.org Received-SPF: pass (nike.apache.org: local policy includes SPF record at spf.trusted-forwarder.org) X-Google-DKIM-Signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=1e100.net; s=20130820; h=x-gm-message-state:references:mime-version:in-reply-to:content-type :content-transfer-encoding:message-id:cc:from:subject:date:to; bh=9KMrbJApAsdQ8IndrxfOUpOZki2KvHsApJ1FIQSouHU=; b=gyVXcQoM8VNhkona6ddvxv8bhFlTnY4fwF7LxDEgl8xeMkwlMhIdcOLZgm3h+tQjV4 LpTTZr6wQtb+PHtyHiKommqF4bbhER20ClRT23/jsN1ZwagDbd3IJdmY4tGAtDLujPsh slLRgN9SA/7VuJCuAGCQouvdcKx7pkGKjuYKCOGhzh6WqILd++7CLak85g9GWs5pHlZq C/cPmeU+eiNvoVuYeRiS5RmgdDF/scHQdZJ/KwgIygdCRjb5ivX/33BNCV8wnlZriFnn YR0ojljUwGE+R2Zn9dfgOnEEriao5IqgNDFIX5ZV2/Fvs6TZHwjASTp4ibVqs//OxlwU 6hig== X-Gm-Message-State: ALoCoQkqqoG8Dzo1+H6LwBJmn+86tYu9CLXUYoWunoYdOwzeKBacoEunDBY65qXShIE1FvsfyBsi X-Received: by 10.140.30.116 with SMTP id c107mr16662593qgc.13.1396230013860; Sun, 30 Mar 2014 18:40:13 -0700 (PDT) References: <72f68dcee17c92724bc7822fb7965148edf.20140327153002@mail152.atl61.mcsv.net> Mime-Version: 1.0 (1.0) In-Reply-To: Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary=Apple-Mail-4A6CC7B3-BA05-4FBB-B42A-B8A5F20F0866 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Message-Id: <3E16C840-1544-4552-9B5D-71F3B4ABA506@nosqlweekly.com> Cc: "marketing@couchdb.apache.org" X-Mailer: iPhone Mail (11B651) From: Rahul Chaudhary Subject: Re: NoSQL Weekly - Issue 174 Date: Sun, 30 Mar 2014 21:40:11 -0400 To: "andywenk@apache.org" X-Virus-Checked: Checked by ClamAV on apache.org --Apple-Mail-4A6CC7B3-BA05-4FBB-B42A-B8A5F20F0866 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable Hi Andy,=20 Thanks for getting in touch. I will check it out. Regards Rahul Sent from my iPhone > On Mar 30, 2014, at 2:50 PM, Andy Wenk wrote: >=20 > Hi Rahul, >=20 > thanks for replying on Twitter :). >=20 > As a member of the Apache CouchDB marketing team, I would like to introduc= e you to our weekly news. We started last Thursday and provide the recent ne= ws about the Apache CouchDB project and interesting topics around CouchDB fr= om the community. >=20 > We would be very happy when you visit our blog at http://blogs.apache.org/= couchdb/ and scan the latest news. If you would like to receive weekly push n= otifications about the news, please let me know. We are in an early stage in= the marketing setup and are happy about any ideas on how to provide the new= s to you. >=20 > We highly appreciate your efforts with collecting infos from the NoSQL wor= ld. Your newsletter is an awesome resource and we would like to be part of i= t. We are convinced that Apache CouchDB is of great value for many people an= d it's worth to spread the word about it.=20 >=20 > If you have any questions, please don't hesitate to get in touch with me o= r the marketing team at marketing@couchdb.apache.org. >=20 > Thanks a lot and all the best! >=20 > Cheers >=20 > Andy >=20 >=20 >> On 27 March 2014 16:30, NoSQL Weekly wrote: >>=20 >> Email not displaying correctly? View it in your browser. >>=20 >> Welcome to issue 174 of NoSQL Weekly. I would like to thank our sponsor t= his week, Tokutek for their support. Be sure to download and try out their g= reat product. >>=20 >> =46rom Our Sponsor=20 >> =20 >> TokuMX is a high-performance distribution of MongoDB that increases= performance by 20x, reduces database size by 90%, and adds transactions wit= h MVCC and ACID reliability. You can switch between distros without having t= o make changes to your application. Download today. >>=20 >> News >>=20 >> Cassandra Hits One Million Writes Per Second on Google Compute Engine >> This post shows how the Google Cloud Platform was able to sustain one mil= lion Cassandra writes per second at a cost of $0.07 USD per million writes. >>=20 >>=20 >> Articles, Tutorials and Talks >>=20 >> Going Native with Apache Cassandra >> This talk introduces the Cassandra native protocol, native drivers and Ca= ssandra Query Language (CQL). It is important for developers to be aware of t= his new way of integrating with and querying Cassandra -- without using Thri= ft or RPC. There are various ways of tuning that integration and modeling yo= ur data - all intended to make it easier and more productive to build agains= t Cassandra with some additional performance benefits. >>=20 >> Call me maybe: FoundationDB vs. Jepsen >> This post is about what the author learned from running Jepsen against Fo= undationDB, while sitting in a room with the developers that built the datab= ase. It discusses how Jepsen works in general, how FoundationDB should respo= nd in theory, and then use an internal logging tool to show you how Foundati= onDB actually behaves when Jepsen tests it. >>=20 >> NoSQL and the Hybrid Cloud >> If a NoSQL database can be deployed on-premise or it can be deployed in t= he cloud, why can't it be deployed on-premise and in the cloud? It can, and i= t should. This article highlights a variety of hybrid cloud use cases for No= SQL database deployments. >>=20 >> Implementing Graph-Based Applications >> Graphs have proven to be widely applicable to model a range of business p= roblems and domains. Yet, the flexibility that graphs bring requires an addi= tional level of attention to implementation and an adaptation of familiar pr= ogramming idioms to increase the benefits while avoiding common pitfalls. Th= e following topics summarise patterns and strategy the author used across a n= umber of Neo4j projects. >>=20 >> Quickly create a 100k Neo4j graph data model with Cypher only >> We want to run some test queries on an existing graph model but have no s= ample data at hand and also no input files (CSV,GraphML) that would provide i= t. Why not create quickly it on our own just using cypher? >>=20 >> Introduction to Apache Falcon: Data Governance for Hadoop >> Apache Falcon is a data governance engine that defines, schedules, and mo= nitors data management policies. Falcon allows Hadoop administrators to cent= rally define their data pipelines, and then Falcon uses those definitions to= auto-generate workflows in Apache Oozie. >>=20 >> Deploying Oracle NoSQL Database on AWS in 10 minutes >> In this video, learn how to deploy Oracle NoSQL Database on AWS in 10 min= utes. We also demonstrate high availability features in case of node failure= . >>=20 >> Schema detection with inheritance in Neo4j >>=20 >> How-to: Use Parquet with Impala, Hive, Pig, and MapReduce >>=20 >> Single Page Application with Angular.js, Node.js and MongoDB >>=20 >> Caching Partial Traversals in Neo4j >>=20 >> A practical comparison of Map-Reduce in MongoDB and RavenDB >>=20 >>=20 >> Books >>=20 >> Hadoop For Dummies >> Big data has become big business, and companies and organizations of all s= izes are struggling to find ways to retrieve valuable information from their= massive data sets with becoming overwhelmed. Enter Hadoop and this easy-to-= understand For Dummies guide. Hadoop For Dummies helps readers understand th= e value of big data, make a business case for using Hadoop, navigate the Had= oop ecosystem, and build and manage Hadoop applications and clusters. >>=20 >>=20 >> Interesting Projects, Tools and Libraries >>=20 >> Tajo >> An open source big data warehouse system in Hadoop. >>=20 >> Beekeeper >> Beekeeper is a Customizable, RealTime Graphing built on MongoDB and cube.= >>=20 >> vagrant-node >> A vagrant setup for MongoDB and Nodejs web apps. >>=20 >> redis-traffic-stats >> Redis query analyzer for counting, traffic stats by command. >>=20 >> Mongolike >> A proof of concept MongoDB clone built on Postgres. >>=20 >>=20 >> Upcoming Events and Webinars >>=20 >> Cleveland Big Data and Hadoop Meetup March 2014 - Cleveland, OH >> There will be following talks >> Intro to Data Center Networking >> Networking for Cluster Computing >> HBase key design for timeseries and business data >>=20 >> Best Practices for Storing, Querying, and Visualizing Big Data - Palo Alt= o, CA >> Join The Big Data Connection at Nimble Storage's beautiful campus in San J= ose as solution engineers and architects from Cloudera, Nimble Storage, Zoom= Data, and the American Institute of Big Data Professionals present next-gene= ration solution ideas around storage, big data architecture, and analytics a= nd visualization. >>=20 >> Netherlands Hadoop Meetup - Amsterdam, Netherlands >> There will be following presentations >> In-memory Computation and HDFS: What's Next? >> Cascading >> Balancing Data Collection and Privacy >>=20 >> Graphs for Everyone: a guided tour to neo4j 2.0 - Amsterdam, Netherlands >> Leading up to GotoCon Amsterdam in June 2014, we are organising some Neo4= j 2.0 briefings for those of you that are interested. >>=20 >> Introduction Into Graphs DBs - Tel Aviv-Yafo, Israel >> This is an introductory session on what graph databases are, how they can= be used, what purposes that they serve and how they distinguish from other t= ypes of databases. During this session we will present, explain and discuss i= ntroductory topics that require no prior knowledge on graph databases at all= . We will cover the concepts of a graph database as well as couple of use ca= ses from real life projects. >>=20 >> Hands-on Neo4j 2.0 with Jim Webber - Auckland, New Zealand >> We'll introduce Neo4j 2.0 and the labelled property graph model to bring n= ew folks up to speed. We'll then look at how Neo4j's query language Cypher h= as evolved allowing us to query large, sophisticated variably-structured dat= a (aka graphs) rapidly in real time, using examples from travel and (retail)= recommendations. >>=20 >> Share NoSQL Weekly =20 >> =20 >>=20 >> You are receiving our weekly newsletter because you signed up at http://w= ww.NoSQLWeekly.com.=20 >>=20 >> Unsubscribe andy@nms.de from this list | Forward to a friend | Update you= r profile=20 >> Our mailing address is:=20 >> NoSQL Weekly >> Brooklyn >> Brooklyn, New York 11228 >>=20 >> Add us to your address book >>=20 >> Copyright (C) 2014 NoSQL Weekly All rights reserved.=20 >> =20 >=20 >=20 >=20 > --=20 > Andy Wenk > Hamburg - Germany > RockIt! >=20 > GPG fingerprint: C044 8322 9E12 1483 4FEC 9452 B65D 6BE3 9ED3 9588 >=20 > https://people.apache.org/keys/committer/andywenk.asc --Apple-Mail-4A6CC7B3-BA05-4FBB-B42A-B8A5F20F0866--