Another Word For It Patrick Durusau on Topic Maps and Semantic Diversity

June 8, 2012

Riak Handbook, Second Edition [$29 for 154 pages of content]

Filed under: NoSQL,Riak — Patrick Durusau @ 8:57 pm

Riak Handbook, Second Edition, by Mathias Meyer.

From the post:

Basho Technologies today announced the immediate availability of the second edition of Riak Handbook. The significantly updated Riak Handbook includes more than 43 pages of new content covering many of the latest feature enhancements to Riak, Basho’s industry-leading, open-source, distributed database. Riak Handbook is authored by former Basho developer and advocate, Mathias Meyer.

Riak Handbook is a comprehensive, hands-on guide to Riak. The initial release of Riak Handbook focused on the driving forces behind Riak, including Amazon Dynamo, eventual consistency and CAP Theorem. Through a collection of examples and code, Mathias’ Riak Handbook explores the mechanics of Riak, such as storing and retrieving data, indexing, searching and querying data, and sheds a light on Riak in production. The updated handbook expands on previously covered key concepts and introduces new capabilities, including the following:

  • An overview of Riak Control, a new Web-based operations management tool
  • Full coverage on pre- and post-commit hooks, including JavaScript and Erlang examples
  • An entirely new section on deploying Erlang code in a Riak cluster
  • Additional details on secondary indexes
  • Insight into load balancing Riak nodes
  • An introduction to network node planning
  • An introduction to Riak CS, includes Amazon S3 API compatibility

The updated Riak Handbook includes an entirely new section dedicated to popular use cases and is full of examples and code from real-time usage scenarios.

Mathias Meyer is an experienced software developer, consultant and coach from Berlin, Germany. He has worked with database technology leaders such as Sybase and Oracle. He entered into the world of NoSQL in 2008 and joined Basho Technologies in 2010.

I haven’t ordered a copy. The $29.00 for 154 odd pages of content seems a bit steep to me.

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