Functions + Messages + Concurrency = ErlangI was glad to hear several of Joe's talks and enjoyed this one as well
Showing posts with label Erlang. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Erlang. Show all posts
Thursday, June 11, 2009
Joe Armstrong Talk: Functions + Messages + Concurrency = Erlang
A very good talk (video and slides) by Joe Armstrong from Qcon hosted at InfoQ:
Friday, March 6, 2009
CACM Article
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The March issue of the Communications of the ACM journal features a new version of Jim Larson's article on Erlang: "Erlang for Concurrent Programming" (go here for the previous version)
Saturday, November 15, 2008
Erlang User Conference 2008 in Stockholm
Photos from the Erlang User Conference 2008 can be found here.
Update:
I forgot to mention that the article will tell you who became Erlang User of the Year 2008 :-)
Update:
I forgot to mention that the article will tell you who became Erlang User of the Year 2008 :-)
Saturday, September 27, 2008
CouchDB Screencast
Another interesting screencast from PeepCode this week, which I came to know because of their screencast and pdf on the Git distributed revision control system.

Otherwise they seem to focus on Ruby on Rails.

This time they teamed up with Jan Lehnardt of CouchDB, who wrote:
So did I, because I want more Erlang stuff produced.

Otherwise they seem to focus on Ruby on Rails.

This time they teamed up with Jan Lehnardt of CouchDB, who wrote:
Hello everybody,
Geoffrey Grosenbach, famous for his PeepCode (http://peepcode.com/)
screencasts for developers, released a "CouchDB & Rails" screencast.
It is useful even if you don't do Rails but want to learn CouchDB. Go check
it out. It is only $9 and a free preview is available.
https://peepcode.com/products/couchdb-with-rails
Cheers
Jan
--
PS: If enough people buy this one, Geoffrey will work on more advanced
follow-up screencasts and I totally want that, so please do me a favour :)
So did I, because I want more Erlang stuff produced.
Labels:
CouchDB,
Erlang,
Geoffrey Grosenbach,
Git,
Jan Lehnardt,
PeepCode,
Ruby on Rails,
Screencast,
Video
Monday, September 8, 2008
Announcement Erlang User Conference 2008
Friday, September 5, 2008
Erlang Programming

After Joe Armstrong's book "Programming Erlang" there will be "Erlang Programming" by Francesco Cesarini and Simon Thompson. Amazon.com lists it for December, 1st.
Labels:
Erlang,
Erlang Programming,
Francesco Cesarini,
Simon Thompson
Wednesday, September 3, 2008
Tuesday, July 8, 2008
Erlang eXchange Videos
If you missed the recent Erlang eXchange conference in London or want to see the talks again, some of them are available on Google video. Just search for Erlang eXchange.
Friday, June 20, 2008
Video: Scalable Wikipedia with Erlang
From the recent Google Seattle Conference on Scalability 2008 there are now videos on YouTube.
Among them Thorsten Schütt's talk "Scalable Wikipedia with Erlang".
Among them Thorsten Schütt's talk "Scalable Wikipedia with Erlang".
Sunday, June 1, 2008
Lennart Öhmann Video on Erlang/OTP
While I am at the history of Erlang, here is a video of a talk from Lennart Öhmann last year at Google.
A History of Erlang
There is a really nice paper by Joe Armstrong: A History of Erlang. I was able to read it some time ago, but seem to have forgotten to post about it here.
Good that Ted Leung on the Air featured it again. Among the comments, there is a remark from Ulf Wiger about the history of SMP Erlang.
Good that Ted Leung on the Air featured it again. Among the comments, there is a remark from Ulf Wiger about the history of SMP Erlang.
Friday, May 30, 2008
Steve and Joe on RPC
Joe Armstrong posted a summary of a recent discussion on the erlang-questions mailing list about the problems of the RPC (Remote Procedure Call) mechanism, where Steve Vinoski explained his opinions.
Joe added his opinion as well and explained the Erlang way of handling remote calls.
Steve then wrote about Joe's summary in this article.
Joe added his opinion as well and explained the Erlang way of handling remote calls.
Steve then wrote about Joe's summary in this article.
Sunday, May 18, 2008
More Threads, More Trouble?
My Google Alert on Erlang spew out this article: More Threads, More Trouble?
It starts with the observation that we move from increasing CPU clock speed to an increasing number of cores and then continues with a brief overview of prominent approaches to add concurrency to software systems / concurrent computing:
It starts with the observation that we move from increasing CPU clock speed to an increasing number of cores and then continues with a brief overview of prominent approaches to add concurrency to software systems / concurrent computing:
- time-sharing
- multi-processing / multi-tasking
- multi-threading
- shared memory
- OpenMP / MPI
- futures
- message passing (with Occam and Erlang mentioned)
- Communicating Sequential Processes (CSP)
- transactional memory / software transactional memory (STM)
Saturday, May 17, 2008
Facebook Chat
Found at Yariv's Blog: Facebook Chat is an article about the technology behind the Facebook social network.
They have a large web application with up to 70 Million users and want to provide them with presence information (like: "I am online", "I am busy", "I am away", "I am offline").
As the bidirectional information channel between the user's web browser and the Facebook servers they use BOSH, the XMPP way of binding XMPP via HTTP requests. The requests for BOSH are handled by a web server implemented in Erlang.
They have a large web application with up to 70 Million users and want to provide them with presence information (like: "I am online", "I am busy", "I am away", "I am offline").
As the bidirectional information channel between the user's web browser and the Facebook servers they use BOSH, the XMPP way of binding XMPP via HTTP requests. The requests for BOSH are handled by a web server implemented in Erlang.
Saturday, April 12, 2008
Chaos on Erlang
From upper left to lower right: logo Chaosradio, a diagram on discordianism, a spoofed Trans Europ Express train (TEE) and the Chaosknoten (chaos knot) which is a spoof of the old German cable network logo (it features a letter K for Kabel)
More Erlang coverage from Germany's Chaos Computer Club (CCC):
- There was a recent one hour broadcast about Erlang on Chaosradio Express:
CRE082: Erlang - Die Programmiersprache für Gleichzeitiges, Robustes und Verteiltes
Presenter Tim Pritlove talks with Ben Fuhrmannek about Erlang. It was recorded at the Easterhegg in Cologne. (Found via the Chaosradio Blog) - One of the links for the CRE082 broadcast points to the Erlang lecture from the Easterhegg 2008 conference of the Cologne CCC branch:
Wissenswertes über Erlang - sehr praktische Einführung in die moderne Programmiersprache
- Another CR082 link points to an older video broadcast about Erlang:
CTV068: Erlang - Declarative Real Time Programming Now!
It turned out to be the famous 1990 Erlang movie ("Hello Mike? Hello Joe!") which was made in the tradition of Monty Python. If you want to know, what the actors think of their early work, go here. Too bad the director's name will never been known ("We actually used a professional company to do the filming, but I won’t mention their names as they would probably sue me for libel.")
Labels:
Ben Fuhrmannek,
CCC,
Chaos Computer Club,
Chaosradio,
Erlang,
Erlang the movie,
podcast,
radio,
Video
Sunday, April 6, 2008
The Mary Celeste of Programming Languages

Archetypal ghost ship Mary Celeste
Erlang: The Mary Celeste of programming ships, it appeared out of nowhere, nobody really knows what it does or what it’s good for, and nobody knows whats happening to it, or where it is going.Intended as funny, but the grain of truth is there.
(Found at Application Generation, go check the comment on Haskell as well)
Saturday, April 5, 2008
Another Erlang Book Project
April Fools' Day
This year's hoaxes on April 1st in the Erlang Blogosphere were quite good. First I came along
ErlyWeb renamed “Erlang on Rails”
where when viewing it I exclaimed something very profane until I realized I got hooked. :-)
Then came
CouchDB Language Change
which was worse because of the known sponsorship by Java loving IBM it sounded so believable. What a relief it was a prank.
ErlyWeb renamed “Erlang on Rails”
where when viewing it I exclaimed something very profane until I realized I got hooked. :-)
Then came
CouchDB Language Change
which was worse because of the known sponsorship by Java loving IBM it sounded so believable. What a relief it was a prank.
Thursday, March 13, 2008
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