This track is sponsored by
Storage and Big Data
Efficiently extracting relevant information from massive quantities of collected data is increasingly a key requirement for keeping your business ahead of the competition. Formerly, speaking SQL was the way of performing data retrieval. However, there are today numerous technologies ranging from full text search, to object stores and key-value tables. Big data requires new programming paradigms and blurs the boundaries between databases and file systems. Track participants learn about the advantages and pitfalls of storage engines, NoSQL databases, and search indices. A list of tools and projects might include but is not limited to MongoDB, Elastic Search, Redis, Hadoop, Cassandra, Swift, Ceph, Solr, Lucene, Map Reduce, HDFS, and Hadoop.
Time | Saturday, 10.05.2014 - Stage E |
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10:00 | |
10:30 |
Building Google-in-a- box: Using Apache SolrCloud and Bigtop to index your bigdata
Roman Shaposhnik (Pivotal Inc.) |
11:00 | |
11:30 | |
12:00 |
Keynote on Stage 11: GOTO KLARKOMMEN
Felix 'FX' Lindner (Phenoelit) |
12:30 | |
13:00 |
Lunch break in exhibition halls 4 and 6 (included for LinuxTag badge holder)
|
13:30 | |
14:00 |
MySQL high- availability with Galera Cluster
Oli Sennhauser (FromDual GmbH) |
14:30 |
PostgreSQL - Community trifft auf Business
Dr. Michael Meskes (credativ GmbH) |
15:00 |
REDS: Giving the control over your data back to you!
Torben Haase (Flowy Apps) |
15:30 |
Coffee break in exhibition halls 4 and 6 (included for LinuxTag badge holder)
|
16:00 |
MongoDB and Neo4J from an Operations Point of view
Thomas Fricke (Endocode AG) |
16:30 | |
17:00 |
Using XtreemFS for Data Analysis with Hadoop
Christoph Kleineweber (Zuse Institute Berlin) |
17:30 |
Eine für Cloud Computing optimierte Software- defined Storage Plattform (SDS)
David Breitung (openATTIC) |