Dealing with marketing types...

bruce bedouglas at earthlink.net
Sun Jun 12 14:01:22 EDT 2005


just out of curiosity.. where'd you read the 150,000-200,000 servers...

i've never seen guesses that high.. i've seen somewhere as high as possible
100K... but the author stated that he was purely guessing...

-bruce


-----Original Message-----
From: python-list-bounces+bedouglas=earthlink.net at python.org
[mailto:python-list-bounces+bedouglas=earthlink.net at python.org]On Behalf
Of Terry Reedy
Sent: Sunday, June 12, 2005 9:48 AM
To: python-list at python.org
Subject: Re: Dealing with marketing types...



"Paul Rubin" <"http://phr.cx"@NOSPAM.invalid> wrote in message
news:7xwtp09jh3.fsf at ruckus.brouhaha.com...
> Andrew Dalke <dalke at dalkescientific.com> writes:
>> If that's indeed the case then I'll also argue that each of
>> them is going to have app-specific choke points which are best
>> hand-optimized and not framework optimized.  Is there enough
>> real-world experience to design a EnterpriseWeb-o-Rama (your
>> "printing press") which can handle those examples you gave
>> any better than starting off with a LAMP system and hand-caching
>> the parts that need it?
>
> Yes, of course there is.  Look at the mainframe transaction systems of
> the 60's-70's-80's, for example.  Look at Google.

Based on what I've read, if we could look at Google, we would see 150,000
to 200,000 servers (about half bought with IPO money).  We would see a
highly customized dynamic cluster computing infrastructure that can be
utilized with high-level (Python-like) commands.  The need to throw
hundreds of machines at each web request strikes me as rather specialized,
though definitely not limited to search.  So while not LAMP, I don't see it
as generic EWeboRama either.

Terry J. Reedy



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