Posts by Tag

Tech

An Opinionated Programmer

Recently Lex Fridman posted a podcast episode of his discussion with DHH (Duration 6hr+). I have previously written about another such Fridman interview- tha...

GFS Paper

Here is my understanding about Google File System from reading the GFS paper. Some other references: MIT’s lecture video. I will use mostly text here- some o...

Cassandra Paper

Below are some notes from my reading of Facebook’s Cassandra paper.

Linearizability And Serializability

We see these two concepts often when there are concurrent reads and writes on shared objects and have some expectations from a well-behaved system. The syste...

ZooKeeper Paper

Here is my understanding about ZooKeeper from reading the ZooKeeper paper. Some other references: MIT’s lecture video and course notes.

Platforms

A little background: I read “Steve Yegge’s platform rant” when it was published. In that post published on Google plus and marked open to public, he talked a...

Working Around Problems

"The significant problems we have cannot be solved at the same level of thinking with which we created them."- Einstein

Integration

Recently came across the post on Google SRE blog. Lessons Learned from Twenty Years of Site Reliability Engineering

Recommended Books For Programmers

This is another of those Recommended Books For A Programmer posts. Over the years I read a few programming related books. And some of those stayed with me. I...

Two Phase Commit

An old topic. Some content/ notes from Foundations of Scalable Systems by Ian Gorton. Posting here for quick reference.

Idempotent operations

Here is some content about idempotent operations from the book Foundations of Scalable Systems by Ian Gorton

Time in Distributed Systems

Primarily we will talk about logical clocks in this post. But let’s first get physical clocks out of the way.

Being reasonable

Recently changed job after about 5 years. The earlier job was becoming a bit of more managerial than technical.

Development Feedback Loops

An agile trainer once explained the importance of having in-process-checks like automated test suites. The point he was making was about how end of process c...

QR Code

Some recent reads about QR codes are pretty interesting.

Learnings from Dynamo Paper

A while back I read the dynamo paper. Dynamo DB has now progressed beyond that paper. If interested: https://youtu.be/yvBR71D0nAQ

A Master Programmer

Recently Lex Fridman posted a podcast episode of his discussion with John Carmack (Duration 5hr+). Carmack is a legendary programmer. Known for his work on g...

Is TDD Dead- Discussion Revisited

I recently posted this year’s Stack Overflow Developer Survey 2022 Results on engineering channel of my project/ department. It has some 200+ members develop...

Dysfunctional

Here I will appear to be griping a bit so bear with me. A few problems as I see with the current way of working in my group (around 200 folks) are drafted be...

Ideas Without Contexts

As we grow, and start thinking on our own- sometimes from ground up- we notice that context matters a lot. I feel this is generally true in life as in softwa...

Concurrent vs Parallel

This is the most simplified version of the difference between the two concepts I have found. It is from Joe Armstrong’s blog. And if anyone knows the differe...

Bulkhead in Software Systems

From the book Release It! Second Edition In a ship, bulkheads are partitions that, when sealed, divide the ship into separate, watertight compartments. With...

Tail Recursion

Ok. Everyone knows what recursion and tail recursion is. Then why write this post? Well, I have copied the content below from Joe Armstrong’s thesis. And he ...

Summary: Joe Armstrong’s Thesis: Erlang

If my earlier post about Joe Armstrong’s Thesis was a long read, here is an attempt at a shorter version of my notes of Joe Armstrong’s thesis on Making reli...

Release It: Book by Michael Nygard

The book ‘Release It’ by Michael Nygard is targeted towards Architects, Designer, Programmers of distributed software systems. It has very practical advice. ...

Takeaways from Joe Armstrong’s thesis

I recently finished reading Joe Armstrong’s thesis. Making reliable distributed systems in the presence of software errors (2003). To quote: “The central pro...

Continuous Delivery

Continuous Delivery by Jez Humble and Dave Farley is now an old book. You probably already follow most of the practices it recommends.

Out of the tar pit

Paper: https://github.com/papers-we-love/papers-we-love/blob/master/design/out-of-the-tar-pit.pdf

Clean as you go

A very important thing when writing code or maintaining it is to go on deleting unnecessary pieces of code. Unused code starts becoming clutter and we should...

Libraries Vs Frameworks

If you ask even a junior developer, they will tell you that libraries should be preferred to frameworks.

Caching

Client-side caching: the client stores the cached result and refresh when it wants. Reduced network calls. Cache invalidation is difficult. For example, if y...

Exploring Bash And Terminal

Let me mention that probably because of Mac I have started appreciating unix. Unix was sort of arcane land for me. I used it only when required on projects. ...

A review of GoF Deign Patterns Book

Nowadays, in the world of functional programming, object oriented design patterns are probably not fashionable. But here is a short review of Design Patterns...

Is TDD Dead?

Is TDD dead? I don’t think so. Is TDD a replacement for good design? No, in that a bad or an inexperienced designer can come up with very bad system even th...

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reading

An Opinionated Programmer

Recently Lex Fridman posted a podcast episode of his discussion with DHH (Duration 6hr+). I have previously written about another such Fridman interview- tha...

GFS Paper

Here is my understanding about Google File System from reading the GFS paper. Some other references: MIT’s lecture video. I will use mostly text here- some o...

Skin In The Game

Recently I listened to audiobook version of Nassim Nicholas Taleb’s (NNT) book Skin In The Game. Here is a brief understanding.

Thoughts In Progress: 2

In the Thoughts-In-Progress posts, I write about ideas some of which I may not be fully convinced of yet. Or about which I have not made up my mind yet- this...

About Learning

Recently, I finished listening to the audiobook Make It Stick. The book is about techniques to use when learning. It was a recommendation from a youtube chan...

Cassandra Paper

Below are some notes from my reading of Facebook’s Cassandra paper.

Linearizability And Serializability

We see these two concepts often when there are concurrent reads and writes on shared objects and have some expectations from a well-behaved system. The syste...

ZooKeeper Paper

Here is my understanding about ZooKeeper from reading the ZooKeeper paper. Some other references: MIT’s lecture video and course notes.

Out Of Line

Here I plan to write some of my thoughts which are not in line- as of now- with the conventional accepted wisdom or thoughts. That doesn’t mean that I am not...

Quotes

In nature there are neither rewards nor punishments; there are consequences. As you sow, so shall you reap. Child is father of the ma...

Bookmarks

Here I plan to note down links, etc. which I found interesting/ planned to visit later. Some of these may be half-read. Tech/non-Tech I will keep on updating...

Working Around Problems

"The significant problems we have cannot be solved at the same level of thinking with which we created them."- Einstein

Integration

Recently came across the post on Google SRE blog. Lessons Learned from Twenty Years of Site Reliability Engineering

Recommended Books For Programmers

This is another of those Recommended Books For A Programmer posts. Over the years I read a few programming related books. And some of those stayed with me. I...

Basic Economics

I find money and economics to be somewhat boring subjects. But these are very important. They make the world go round, so to say. So these are very important...

Two Phase Commit

An old topic. Some content/ notes from Foundations of Scalable Systems by Ian Gorton. Posting here for quick reference.

Idempotent operations

Here is some content about idempotent operations from the book Foundations of Scalable Systems by Ian Gorton

Cognitive Biases

Over past few years, cognitive biases have been of passive interest/ fascination for me. Passive because I haven’t actually gone deliberately out of the way ...

QR Code

Some recent reads about QR codes are pretty interesting.

Recently Read

May 2025 Recently Read: Recently I re-read three P. G. Wodehouse books. One was a Jeeves and Wooster novel and the other two were from the Blandings Castle s...

Learnings from Dynamo Paper

A while back I read the dynamo paper. Dynamo DB has now progressed beyond that paper. If interested: https://youtu.be/yvBR71D0nAQ

Visual Display Of Quantitative Information

A recent purchase. Visual Display Of Quantitative Information by Ed Tufte. I will start reading it soon. There is a big reading list queue. But will probably...

A Master Programmer

Recently Lex Fridman posted a podcast episode of his discussion with John Carmack (Duration 5hr+). Carmack is a legendary programmer. Known for his work on g...

Concurrent vs Parallel

This is the most simplified version of the difference between the two concepts I have found. It is from Joe Armstrong’s blog. And if anyone knows the differe...

Bulkhead in Software Systems

From the book Release It! Second Edition In a ship, bulkheads are partitions that, when sealed, divide the ship into separate, watertight compartments. With...

Out of the tar pit

Paper: https://github.com/papers-we-love/papers-we-love/blob/master/design/out-of-the-tar-pit.pdf

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technical-reading

GFS Paper

Here is my understanding about Google File System from reading the GFS paper. Some other references: MIT’s lecture video. I will use mostly text here- some o...

Cassandra Paper

Below are some notes from my reading of Facebook’s Cassandra paper.

Linearizability And Serializability

We see these two concepts often when there are concurrent reads and writes on shared objects and have some expectations from a well-behaved system. The syste...

ZooKeeper Paper

Here is my understanding about ZooKeeper from reading the ZooKeeper paper. Some other references: MIT’s lecture video and course notes.

Platforms

A little background: I read “Steve Yegge’s platform rant” when it was published. In that post published on Google plus and marked open to public, he talked a...

Consolidations And Monopolies

If I remember correctly, around 2009/10/11/12 I used to read anything related to technology I found on the net. Of course I did not know many authoritative s...

Short Takes 1

In the short-takes posts I write about some concepts, phrases, models, ideas, whatever related to my work and life. As these are likely to be known to many, ...

Working Around Problems

"The significant problems we have cannot be solved at the same level of thinking with which we created them."- Einstein

Integration

Recently came across the post on Google SRE blog. Lessons Learned from Twenty Years of Site Reliability Engineering

Recommended Books For Programmers

This is another of those Recommended Books For A Programmer posts. Over the years I read a few programming related books. And some of those stayed with me. I...

Two Phase Commit

An old topic. Some content/ notes from Foundations of Scalable Systems by Ian Gorton. Posting here for quick reference.

Idempotent operations

Here is some content about idempotent operations from the book Foundations of Scalable Systems by Ian Gorton

Learnings from Dynamo Paper

A while back I read the dynamo paper. Dynamo DB has now progressed beyond that paper. If interested: https://youtu.be/yvBR71D0nAQ

Bulkhead in Software Systems

From the book Release It! Second Edition In a ship, bulkheads are partitions that, when sealed, divide the ship into separate, watertight compartments. With...

Tail Recursion

Ok. Everyone knows what recursion and tail recursion is. Then why write this post? Well, I have copied the content below from Joe Armstrong’s thesis. And he ...

Summary: Joe Armstrong’s Thesis: Erlang

If my earlier post about Joe Armstrong’s Thesis was a long read, here is an attempt at a shorter version of my notes of Joe Armstrong’s thesis on Making reli...

Release It: Book by Michael Nygard

The book ‘Release It’ by Michael Nygard is targeted towards Architects, Designer, Programmers of distributed software systems. It has very practical advice. ...

Continuous Delivery

Continuous Delivery by Jez Humble and Dave Farley is now an old book. You probably already follow most of the practices it recommends.

Out of the tar pit

Paper: https://github.com/papers-we-love/papers-we-love/blob/master/design/out-of-the-tar-pit.pdf

A review of GoF Deign Patterns Book

Nowadays, in the world of functional programming, object oriented design patterns are probably not fashionable. But here is a short review of Design Patterns...

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thoughts

Short Takes 2

In the short-takes posts I write about some concepts, phrases, models, ideas, whatever related to my work and life. As these are likely to be known to many, ...

Skin In The Game

Recently I listened to audiobook version of Nassim Nicholas Taleb’s (NNT) book Skin In The Game. Here is a brief understanding.

Thoughts In Progress: 2

In the Thoughts-In-Progress posts, I write about ideas some of which I may not be fully convinced of yet. Or about which I have not made up my mind yet- this...

About Learning

Recently, I finished listening to the audiobook Make It Stick. The book is about techniques to use when learning. It was a recommendation from a youtube chan...

Out Of Line

Here I plan to write some of my thoughts which are not in line- as of now- with the conventional accepted wisdom or thoughts. That doesn’t mean that I am not...

Quotes

In nature there are neither rewards nor punishments; there are consequences. As you sow, so shall you reap. Child is father of the ma...

Platforms

A little background: I read “Steve Yegge’s platform rant” when it was published. In that post published on Google plus and marked open to public, he talked a...

Consolidations And Monopolies

If I remember correctly, around 2009/10/11/12 I used to read anything related to technology I found on the net. Of course I did not know many authoritative s...

Short Takes 1

In the short-takes posts I write about some concepts, phrases, models, ideas, whatever related to my work and life. As these are likely to be known to many, ...

Thoughts In Progress: 1

In the Thoughts-In-Progress posts, I write about ideas some of which I may not be fully convinced of yet. Or about which I have not made up my mind yet- this...

Bookmarks

Here I plan to note down links, etc. which I found interesting/ planned to visit later. Some of these may be half-read. Tech/non-Tech I will keep on updating...

In The Grip Of An Idea

"The idea possessed her imagination and she took pleasure in it." - Margaret Mitchell in Gone With the Wind We should hold onto our ideas lightly. Put a lit...

Working Around Problems

"The significant problems we have cannot be solved at the same level of thinking with which we created them."- Einstein

Cause and Effect

Does it happen to you? Learning a new thing confuses you during the process. The discomfort till you understand the new ideas, techniques- maybe understand j...

Mental Model- Death By A Thousand Cuts

Are you aware of this concept of ‘death by a thousand cuts’? For me it means somewhere between the two wiki entries related to it. One is about a torture tec...

Being reasonable

Recently changed job after about 5 years. The earlier job was becoming a bit of more managerial than technical.

Development Feedback Loops

An agile trainer once explained the importance of having in-process-checks like automated test suites. The point he was making was about how end of process c...

Dysfunctional

Here I will appear to be griping a bit so bear with me. A few problems as I see with the current way of working in my group (around 200 folks) are drafted be...

Ideas Without Contexts

As we grow, and start thinking on our own- sometimes from ground up- we notice that context matters a lot. I feel this is generally true in life as in softwa...

Clean as you go

A very important thing when writing code or maintaining it is to go on deleting unnecessary pieces of code. Unused code starts becoming clutter and we should...

Libraries Vs Frameworks

If you ask even a junior developer, they will tell you that libraries should be preferred to frameworks.

Mental Models

I have known a few but while reading through a long list of mental models the post’s author finds repeatedly useful, I came to know that I use following mode...

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distributed-systems

GFS Paper

Here is my understanding about Google File System from reading the GFS paper. Some other references: MIT’s lecture video. I will use mostly text here- some o...

Cassandra Paper

Below are some notes from my reading of Facebook’s Cassandra paper.

Linearizability And Serializability

We see these two concepts often when there are concurrent reads and writes on shared objects and have some expectations from a well-behaved system. The syste...

ZooKeeper Paper

Here is my understanding about ZooKeeper from reading the ZooKeeper paper. Some other references: MIT’s lecture video and course notes.

Working Around Problems

"The significant problems we have cannot be solved at the same level of thinking with which we created them."- Einstein

Two Phase Commit

An old topic. Some content/ notes from Foundations of Scalable Systems by Ian Gorton. Posting here for quick reference.

Idempotent operations

Here is some content about idempotent operations from the book Foundations of Scalable Systems by Ian Gorton

Time in Distributed Systems

Primarily we will talk about logical clocks in this post. But let’s first get physical clocks out of the way.

Learnings from Dynamo Paper

A while back I read the dynamo paper. Dynamo DB has now progressed beyond that paper. If interested: https://youtu.be/yvBR71D0nAQ

Summary: Joe Armstrong’s Thesis: Erlang

If my earlier post about Joe Armstrong’s Thesis was a long read, here is an attempt at a shorter version of my notes of Joe Armstrong’s thesis on Making reli...

Release It: Book by Michael Nygard

The book ‘Release It’ by Michael Nygard is targeted towards Architects, Designer, Programmers of distributed software systems. It has very practical advice. ...

Takeaways from Joe Armstrong’s thesis

I recently finished reading Joe Armstrong’s thesis. Making reliable distributed systems in the presence of software errors (2003). To quote: “The central pro...

Back to Top ↑

technical-papers

GFS Paper

Here is my understanding about Google File System from reading the GFS paper. Some other references: MIT’s lecture video. I will use mostly text here- some o...

Cassandra Paper

Below are some notes from my reading of Facebook’s Cassandra paper.

ZooKeeper Paper

Here is my understanding about ZooKeeper from reading the ZooKeeper paper. Some other references: MIT’s lecture video and course notes.

Learnings from Dynamo Paper

A while back I read the dynamo paper. Dynamo DB has now progressed beyond that paper. If interested: https://youtu.be/yvBR71D0nAQ

Bulkhead in Software Systems

From the book Release It! Second Edition In a ship, bulkheads are partitions that, when sealed, divide the ship into separate, watertight compartments. With...

Tail Recursion

Ok. Everyone knows what recursion and tail recursion is. Then why write this post? Well, I have copied the content below from Joe Armstrong’s thesis. And he ...

Summary: Joe Armstrong’s Thesis: Erlang

If my earlier post about Joe Armstrong’s Thesis was a long read, here is an attempt at a shorter version of my notes of Joe Armstrong’s thesis on Making reli...

Takeaways from Joe Armstrong’s thesis

I recently finished reading Joe Armstrong’s thesis. Making reliable distributed systems in the presence of software errors (2003). To quote: “The central pro...

Out of the tar pit

Paper: https://github.com/papers-we-love/papers-we-love/blob/master/design/out-of-the-tar-pit.pdf

Back to Top ↑

books

Skin In The Game

Recently I listened to audiobook version of Nassim Nicholas Taleb’s (NNT) book Skin In The Game. Here is a brief understanding.

About Learning

Recently, I finished listening to the audiobook Make It Stick. The book is about techniques to use when learning. It was a recommendation from a youtube chan...

Basic Economics

I find money and economics to be somewhat boring subjects. But these are very important. They make the world go round, so to say. So these are very important...

Cognitive Biases

Over past few years, cognitive biases have been of passive interest/ fascination for me. Passive because I haven’t actually gone deliberately out of the way ...

Recently Read

May 2025 Recently Read: Recently I re-read three P. G. Wodehouse books. One was a Jeeves and Wooster novel and the other two were from the Blandings Castle s...

Visual Display Of Quantitative Information

A recent purchase. Visual Display Of Quantitative Information by Ed Tufte. I will start reading it soon. There is a big reading list queue. But will probably...

A Master Programmer

Recently Lex Fridman posted a podcast episode of his discussion with John Carmack (Duration 5hr+). Carmack is a legendary programmer. Known for his work on g...

Continuous Delivery

Continuous Delivery by Jez Humble and Dave Farley is now an old book. You probably already follow most of the practices it recommends.

A review of GoF Deign Patterns Book

Nowadays, in the world of functional programming, object oriented design patterns are probably not fashionable. But here is a short review of Design Patterns...

Back to Top ↑

technology-books

Working Around Problems

"The significant problems we have cannot be solved at the same level of thinking with which we created them."- Einstein

Integration

Recently came across the post on Google SRE blog. Lessons Learned from Twenty Years of Site Reliability Engineering

Recommended Books For Programmers

This is another of those Recommended Books For A Programmer posts. Over the years I read a few programming related books. And some of those stayed with me. I...

Learnings from Dynamo Paper

A while back I read the dynamo paper. Dynamo DB has now progressed beyond that paper. If interested: https://youtu.be/yvBR71D0nAQ

Release It: Book by Michael Nygard

The book ‘Release It’ by Michael Nygard is targeted towards Architects, Designer, Programmers of distributed software systems. It has very practical advice. ...

Continuous Delivery

Continuous Delivery by Jez Humble and Dave Farley is now an old book. You probably already follow most of the practices it recommends.

A review of GoF Deign Patterns Book

Nowadays, in the world of functional programming, object oriented design patterns are probably not fashionable. But here is a short review of Design Patterns...

Back to Top ↑

programming

An Opinionated Programmer

Recently Lex Fridman posted a podcast episode of his discussion with DHH (Duration 6hr+). I have previously written about another such Fridman interview- tha...

A Master Programmer

Recently Lex Fridman posted a podcast episode of his discussion with John Carmack (Duration 5hr+). Carmack is a legendary programmer. Known for his work on g...

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concepts

Short Takes 2

In the short-takes posts I write about some concepts, phrases, models, ideas, whatever related to my work and life. As these are likely to be known to many, ...

Consolidations And Monopolies

If I remember correctly, around 2009/10/11/12 I used to read anything related to technology I found on the net. Of course I did not know many authoritative s...

Short Takes 1

In the short-takes posts I write about some concepts, phrases, models, ideas, whatever related to my work and life. As these are likely to be known to many, ...

Back to Top ↑

TDD

Is TDD Dead- Discussion Revisited

I recently posted this year’s Stack Overflow Developer Survey 2022 Results on engineering channel of my project/ department. It has some 200+ members develop...

Is TDD Dead?

Is TDD dead? I don’t think so. Is TDD a replacement for good design? No, in that a bad or an inexperienced designer can come up with very bad system even th...

Back to Top ↑

actor-model

Summary: Joe Armstrong’s Thesis: Erlang

If my earlier post about Joe Armstrong’s Thesis was a long read, here is an attempt at a shorter version of my notes of Joe Armstrong’s thesis on Making reli...

Takeaways from Joe Armstrong’s thesis

I recently finished reading Joe Armstrong’s thesis. Making reliable distributed systems in the presence of software errors (2003). To quote: “The central pro...

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erlang

Summary: Joe Armstrong’s Thesis: Erlang

If my earlier post about Joe Armstrong’s Thesis was a long read, here is an attempt at a shorter version of my notes of Joe Armstrong’s thesis on Making reli...

Takeaways from Joe Armstrong’s thesis

I recently finished reading Joe Armstrong’s thesis. Making reliable distributed systems in the presence of software errors (2003). To quote: “The central pro...

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fault-tolerance

Summary: Joe Armstrong’s Thesis: Erlang

If my earlier post about Joe Armstrong’s Thesis was a long read, here is an attempt at a shorter version of my notes of Joe Armstrong’s thesis on Making reli...

Takeaways from Joe Armstrong’s thesis

I recently finished reading Joe Armstrong’s thesis. Making reliable distributed systems in the presence of software errors (2003). To quote: “The central pro...

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joe-armstrong

Summary: Joe Armstrong’s Thesis: Erlang

If my earlier post about Joe Armstrong’s Thesis was a long read, here is an attempt at a shorter version of my notes of Joe Armstrong’s thesis on Making reli...

Takeaways from Joe Armstrong’s thesis

I recently finished reading Joe Armstrong’s thesis. Making reliable distributed systems in the presence of software errors (2003). To quote: “The central pro...

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learning

About Learning

Recently, I finished listening to the audiobook Make It Stick. The book is about techniques to use when learning. It was a recommendation from a youtube chan...

Bylane Learning

Books (or any good content you consume) have beneficial side effect of teaching you a few add-on things. Things that you had not consciously aimed to learn f...

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programmer

An Opinionated Programmer

Recently Lex Fridman posted a podcast episode of his discussion with DHH (Duration 6hr+). I have previously written about another such Fridman interview- tha...

A Master Programmer

Recently Lex Fridman posted a podcast episode of his discussion with John Carmack (Duration 5hr+). Carmack is a legendary programmer. Known for his work on g...

Back to Top ↑

thoughts-in-progress

Thoughts In Progress: 2

In the Thoughts-In-Progress posts, I write about ideas some of which I may not be fully convinced of yet. Or about which I have not made up my mind yet- this...

Thoughts In Progress: 1

In the Thoughts-In-Progress posts, I write about ideas some of which I may not be fully convinced of yet. Or about which I have not made up my mind yet- this...

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short-takes

Short Takes 2

In the short-takes posts I write about some concepts, phrases, models, ideas, whatever related to my work and life. As these are likely to be known to many, ...

Short Takes 1

In the short-takes posts I write about some concepts, phrases, models, ideas, whatever related to my work and life. As these are likely to be known to many, ...

Back to Top ↑

design-patterns

A review of GoF Deign Patterns Book

Nowadays, in the world of functional programming, object oriented design patterns are probably not fashionable. But here is a short review of Design Patterns...

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review

A review of GoF Deign Patterns Book

Nowadays, in the world of functional programming, object oriented design patterns are probably not fashionable. But here is a short review of Design Patterns...

Back to Top ↑

bash

Exploring Bash And Terminal

Let me mention that probably because of Mac I have started appreciating unix. Unix was sort of arcane land for me. I used it only when required on projects. ...

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terminal

Exploring Bash And Terminal

Let me mention that probably because of Mac I have started appreciating unix. Unix was sort of arcane land for me. I used it only when required on projects. ...

Back to Top ↑

caching

Caching

Client-side caching: the client stores the cached result and refresh when it wants. Reduced network calls. Cache invalidation is difficult. For example, if y...

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continuous-delivery

Continuous Delivery

Continuous Delivery by Jez Humble and Dave Farley is now an old book. You probably already follow most of the practices it recommends.

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notes

Continuous Delivery

Continuous Delivery by Jez Humble and Dave Farley is now an old book. You probably already follow most of the practices it recommends.

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beam

Takeaways from Joe Armstrong’s thesis

I recently finished reading Joe Armstrong’s thesis. Making reliable distributed systems in the presence of software errors (2003). To quote: “The central pro...

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elixir

Takeaways from Joe Armstrong’s thesis

I recently finished reading Joe Armstrong’s thesis. Making reliable distributed systems in the presence of software errors (2003). To quote: “The central pro...

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error-handling

Takeaways from Joe Armstrong’s thesis

I recently finished reading Joe Armstrong’s thesis. Making reliable distributed systems in the presence of software errors (2003). To quote: “The central pro...

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functional-programming

Takeaways from Joe Armstrong’s thesis

I recently finished reading Joe Armstrong’s thesis. Making reliable distributed systems in the presence of software errors (2003). To quote: “The central pro...

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generic-server

Takeaways from Joe Armstrong’s thesis

I recently finished reading Joe Armstrong’s thesis. Making reliable distributed systems in the presence of software errors (2003). To quote: “The central pro...

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joe-armstrong-thesis

Takeaways from Joe Armstrong’s thesis

I recently finished reading Joe Armstrong’s thesis. Making reliable distributed systems in the presence of software errors (2003). To quote: “The central pro...

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otp

Takeaways from Joe Armstrong’s thesis

I recently finished reading Joe Armstrong’s thesis. Making reliable distributed systems in the presence of software errors (2003). To quote: “The central pro...

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system-design

Takeaways from Joe Armstrong’s thesis

I recently finished reading Joe Armstrong’s thesis. Making reliable distributed systems in the presence of software errors (2003). To quote: “The central pro...

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bylane-learning

Bylane Learning

Books (or any good content you consume) have beneficial side effect of teaching you a few add-on things. Things that you had not consciously aimed to learn f...

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estimation

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project-management

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software

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the-mythical-man-month

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architecture

Release It: Book by Michael Nygard

The book ‘Release It’ by Michael Nygard is targeted towards Architects, Designer, Programmers of distributed software systems. It has very practical advice. ...

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michael-nygard

Release It: Book by Michael Nygard

The book ‘Release It’ by Michael Nygard is targeted towards Architects, Designer, Programmers of distributed software systems. It has very practical advice. ...

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release-it

Release It: Book by Michael Nygard

The book ‘Release It’ by Michael Nygard is targeted towards Architects, Designer, Programmers of distributed software systems. It has very practical advice. ...

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joe-armstrongs-thesis

Summary: Joe Armstrong’s Thesis: Erlang

If my earlier post about Joe Armstrong’s Thesis was a long read, here is an attempt at a shorter version of my notes of Joe Armstrong’s thesis on Making reli...

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concurrent

Concurrent vs Parallel

This is the most simplified version of the difference between the two concepts I have found. It is from Joe Armstrong’s blog. And if anyone knows the differe...

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concurrent-vs-parallel

Concurrent vs Parallel

This is the most simplified version of the difference between the two concepts I have found. It is from Joe Armstrong’s blog. And if anyone knows the differe...

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parallel-processes

Concurrent vs Parallel

This is the most simplified version of the difference between the two concepts I have found. It is from Joe Armstrong’s blog. And if anyone knows the differe...

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dynamo-paper

Learnings from Dynamo Paper

A while back I read the dynamo paper. Dynamo DB has now progressed beyond that paper. If interested: https://youtu.be/yvBR71D0nAQ

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cognitive-bias

Cognitive Biases

Over past few years, cognitive biases have been of passive interest/ fascination for me. Passive because I haven’t actually gone deliberately out of the way ...

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death-by-a-thousand-cuts

Mental Model- Death By A Thousand Cuts

Are you aware of this concept of ‘death by a thousand cuts’? For me it means somewhere between the two wiki entries related to it. One is about a torture tec...

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bigtable

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googles-bigtable-paper

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idempotence

Idempotent operations

Here is some content about idempotent operations from the book Foundations of Scalable Systems by Ian Gorton

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two-phase-commit

Two Phase Commit

An old topic. Some content/ notes from Foundations of Scalable Systems by Ian Gorton. Posting here for quick reference.

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models

Short Takes 1

In the short-takes posts I write about some concepts, phrases, models, ideas, whatever related to my work and life. As these are likely to be known to many, ...

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quotes

Quotes

In nature there are neither rewards nor punishments; there are consequences. As you sow, so shall you reap. Child is father of the ma...

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Zookeeper-paper

ZooKeeper Paper

Here is my understanding about ZooKeeper from reading the ZooKeeper paper. Some other references: MIT’s lecture video and course notes.

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Cassandra-paper

Cassandra Paper

Below are some notes from my reading of Facebook’s Cassandra paper.

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Memcache-paper

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GFS-paper

GFS Paper

Here is my understanding about Google File System from reading the GFS paper. Some other references: MIT’s lecture video. I will use mostly text here- some o...

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