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Showing posts with the label Serverless

Announcing Databricks Serverless SQL

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Databricks SQL   already provides a first-class user experience for BI and SQL directly on the data lake, and today, we are excited to announce another step in making data and AI simple with Databricks Serverless SQL. This new capability for Databricks SQL provides instant compute to users for their BI and SQL workloads, with minimal management required and capacity optimizations that can lower overall cost by an average of 40%. This makes it even easier for organizations to expand adoption of the lakehouse for business analysts who are looking to access the rich, real-time datasets of the lakehouse with a simple and performant solution. Under the hood of this capability is an active server fleet, fully managed by Databricks, that can transfer compute capacity to user queries, typically in about 15 seconds. The best part? You only pay for Serverless SQL when users start running reports or queries. Organizations with business analysts who want to analyze data in the data lake with t...

The State of serverless computing 2021

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Serverless computing is redefining the way organizations develop, deploy, and integrate cloud-native applications. According to an industry report, market size of serverless computing is expected to reach 7.72 billion by 2021. A new and compelling paradigm for the deployment of cloud applications, serverless computing is at the precipice of enterprise shift towards containers and microservices. In the year 2021, serverless paradigm shift presents exciting opportunities to organizations by providing a simplified programming model for creating cloud applications by abstracting away most operational concerns. Major cloud vendors, Microsoft, Google, and Amazon are already in the game with their respective offering and there is no reason you shouldn’t aboard the train. 2021 is the year of FaaS All major providers of serverless computing offer several types and tiers of database and storage services to their customers. In addition, all major cloud player such as Amazon, Microsoft and Google ...

Modern applications at AWS

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Innovation has always been part of the Amazon DNA, but about 20 years ago, we went through a radical transformation with the goal of making our iterative process—"invent, launch, reinvent, relaunch, start over, rinse, repeat, again and again"—even faster. The changes we made affected both how we built applications and how we organized our company. Back then, we had only a small fraction of the number of customers that Amazon serves today. Still, we knew that if we wanted to expand the products and services we offered, we had to change the way we approached application architecture. The giant, monolithic "bookstore" application and giant database that we used to power Amazon.com limited our speed and agility. Whenever we wanted to add a new feature or product for our customers, like video streaming, we had to edit and rewrite vast amounts of code on an application that we'd designed specifically for our first product—the bookstore. This was a long, unwieldy p...

Serverless Computing: One Step Forward, Two Steps Back

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Serverless computing offers the potential to program the cloud in an autoscaling, pay-as-you go manner. In this paper we address critical gaps in first-generation serverless computing, which place its autoscaling potential at odds with dominant trends in modern computing: notably data-centric and distributed computing, but also open source and custom hardware. Put together, these gaps make current serverless offerings a bad fit for cloud innovation and particularly bad for data systems innovation. In addition to pinpointing some of the main shortfalls of current serverless architectures, we raise a set of challenges we believe must be met to unlock the radical potential that the cloud---with its exabytes of storage and millions of cores---should offer to innovative developers. Read full article >>>