I left AWS before Aurora was introduced, but I suspect it's similar to how S3 fulfills a similar promise. From the S3 FAQ[1]: > Amazon S3 Standard, S3 Standard-Infrequent Access, and Amazon Glacier storage classes…
I'd be interested in a project like this if it was targetting FreeBSD.
Glacier in particular seems to attract the speculative fascination. Do people not realise the name is not in jest, it really is done with graphene-doped room-temperature ice crystals and laser interference lithography?
It's not publicly available, but it was an internal AWS talk and very-deep-dive on the design & implementation of S3. A real eye opener for what it meant to build at global scale. It's worth joining a global-scale tech…
I left AWS before Aurora was introduced, but I suspect it's similar to how S3 fulfills a similar promise. From the S3 FAQ[1]: > Amazon S3 Standard, S3 Standard-Infrequent Access, and Amazon Glacier storage classes…
I'd be interested in a project like this if it was targetting FreeBSD.
Glacier in particular seems to attract the speculative fascination. Do people not realise the name is not in jest, it really is done with graphene-doped room-temperature ice crystals and laser interference lithography?
It's not publicly available, but it was an internal AWS talk and very-deep-dive on the design & implementation of S3. A real eye opener for what it meant to build at global scale. It's worth joining a global-scale tech…