2014

    Can’t decide which shirt to get!

    Well hello St. Louis BBQ! So good! At Sugarfire.

    Eagerly looking forward to visiting Sump Coffee while in St. Louis.

    Gorgeous Coffee in St. Louis.

    Update (Mar 2023): While doing blog gardening I saw this post and thought I should have called out what coffee shop had this “gorgeous coffee”. I was sure it wasn’t from Sump Coffee. I wasn’t sure if I could figure it out but I looked at the phot and found the location data. It was taken at 2103 Cherokee Street in Saint Louis. Sump is actually just a few blocks away from that location. There is currently a coffee shop called The Mud House there, but that name doesn’t ring any bells and who knows if that was there 10 years ago. We may never know what shop made this delicious combo.

    Spring break trip started. Lunch at Culver’s in Iowa on the way to St. Louis.

    Worked so well for Best Buy. 😕

    @MNHeadhunter: BAD news. Cargill to outsource IT services; 900 jobs affected

    My website will cost $0.02/mo to sit on S3.

    @arqbackup: Next month Amazon’s S3 storage price goes to $.03/GB.

    Given Google Drive price drop I’m wondering if Arq may consider supporting it?

    Great view Seattle.

    Great day with AWS Cloud and #TeamSPS today in Seattle working on simple workflow!

    Tyler is really into Puff, the Magic Dragon. Still a great song.

    Debating if there would be enough interest at Minnebar in a session on the CTO part of a technology organization.

    I’ll be hosting another Minnebar on Minnebar session this year. Join the conversation!

    Processed all images on my website through ImageOptim and reduced total size by 136MB, 16% on average.

    Got my Automatic today for my Mini Cooper. Looking forward to seeing the data!

    Hanging out at Sparrow Cafe, nearest neighborhood coffee shop. Great to see a crowd here.

    brew install npm

    … and into the rabbit hole I go. 🕳🐇

    PHP Post-Facebook

    Facebook is famously built in PHP, and I think it is really interesting to watch what they are doing technically with that massive codebase. This week Facebook announced Hack, a new language that specifically targets their previously released HipHop (HHVM) project released in 2008. Facebook obviously has massive scale challenges, and they have little ability to cache content, so they are having to redefine how PHP works. So what’s interesting about this? Compare this all to Twitter. Twitter was originally built on the very dynamic and popular Rails framework, using Ruby. Twitter had massive scaling problems with near daily “fail whales” displayed during outages. These are now a thing of the past because Twitter brought in a ton of engineering talent, and they effectively engineered Ruby on Rails out of their environment. They replaced the entire architecture with code written in much more performant environments. In short, they grew out of their house and moved to a new house. Imagine what would have happened to the Rails ecosystem if they had instead decided that they would reinvent the ecosystem to scale to what they needed?

    Facebook isn’t the first huge PHP-based website of course. Wikipedia is one of the three-largest sites on the Internet and is built on PHP. All WordPress blogs are built on PHP. However, both of these examples have really good caching scenarios. Wikipedia uses Varnish to cache all requests they can and as a result they reduce their dependency on PHP greatly. WordPress uses caching in the same way. Both sites eschew calls to PHP for the vast majority of their requests by doing this. This is probably the most widely accepted pattern for scaling PHP, which doesn’t have a good track record for scaling. Just bypass PHP as much as possible. However, for Facebook this isn’t an option. They want to personalize every single request so caching just doesn’t work for them.

    I find it fun to watch Facebook doing this. Internally Facebook has a focus on speed and believes that using PHP and PHP-like tools is part of achieving that. They can’t cache. So, rather than move that massive codebase they are changing what it runs in. Instead of moving to a new house, they are remodeling!

    First with the introduction of HHVM, and now with Hack, they are redefining the characteristics of the platform their code runs on to achieve the performance they want. I find this interesting because it is a path so rarely taken. Certainly no small startup could (should?) do this. Their simply isn’t the time or money to do it, and it takes your focus off your main goal. You could look at Google and Go as something similar, but I don’t think their motives for making Go are anything like what Facebook is doing with HHVM and Hack.

    I like to say that PHP is “the people’s language”. It is the disdain of almost any developer you meet. It’s crufty, gross and houses some terrible code. Some of this is the languages fault, but a bunch of it is also that many people first learned to program in PHP. PHP is also the language that nearly every blog and wiki you have ever visited uses. I would go so far as to suggest that there are more page views on the Internet of PHP than any other language in existence.

    Wikimedia Foundation, the non-profit that runs Wikipedia and hosts the Wikimedia engine, is running development versions of Wikimedia on the HHVM engine. Part of Wikipedia’s scaling plan is now coming from the byproduct of Facebook redefining how PHP works. That is really cool. By choosing to change their ecosystem, instead of moving to a new one, Facebook is building a path that millions of blogs and wikis may be able to follow. That is pretty interesting, and why this is a path worth watching.

    Went to a store today and this happened. Converse for all!

    Yum. ☕️

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