As you may recall, Neo4j is a key
component of the Assimilation Monitoring Project. I'm giving a
talk on the project at LinuxCon North American in a couple of
weeks in San Diego.
To help publicize that event, Erin
Watkins of TechTarget interviewed me on the Assimilation
Monitoring project. Her questions do a good job of getting at
what the project is, why I started it and why it's cool. I don't
think Neo4j is explicitly mentioned in this interview. But since
it is neo4j-related, I thought I'd mention it here...
Erin writes:
It's still true: Monitoring sucks. Server monitoring is a touchy subject, and if you've got a large quantity of servers in your arsenal, it's doubly so.
Through a combination of discovery and monitoring, Alan Robertson's Assimilation Monitoring Project hopes to ease those monitoring woes. Robertson, Linux developer and founder of the High-Availability Linux (Linux HA) project, willspeak at LinuxCon North America 2012 in San Diego at the end of August. In this Q&A, we discuss what this project is and how it can help.
Read more --> bit.ly/SNDJPu
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Alan Robertson <al...@unix.sh> - @OSSAlanR
"Openness is the foundation and preservative of friendship... Let me claim from you at all times your undisguised opinions." - William Wilberforce
Alan,
Nice! Make sure to post your conference talk here, too!
/peter
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