A Whirlwind tour of what we did in 2011 and where we are going in 2012 …
A Whirlwind tour of what we did in 2011 and where we are going in 2012 …
Paging Dr. Riak to the Riak ward…
November 17, 2011 The Riak 1.0 Release Party happened just over a week ago in San Francisco. It was an…
We are absolutely thrilled to report that as of today, Riak 1.0 is officially released and ready for your production applications! There is already a lot of literature out there on the release, so here are the essentials to get you started …
We are thrilled to announce that John Newman has joined the Riak Team. John comes on as on our newest Developer Advocate, and will be focusing on User Interface and Web Design for Riak’s various products and web properties.
Several weeks back at the San Francisco Riak Meetup, Tim Bart of Formspring delivered a great talk to a packed house all about how he and his team are using Riak for two new features they were rolling out to their more than 24 million users …
A recap of our recent webinar on using Riak with Python.
Riak presents at OSCON 2011
More awesome news coming out of RiakHQ – Joseph Blomstedt has joined the Riak Team …
I’m thrilled to announced that we’ve just added Eric Moritz as our newest Community Wiki Committer …
In the next year we will solve problems endemic to distributed systems – groundbreaking work of the sort careers are surely made — and yet at the same time, these problems seem incremental and iterative; part of an ongoing process of small improvements. They seem both astounding and inevitable …
We’ve been expanding at an impressive rate as of late (we’re trying to keep up with GitHub), and today we’re thrilled to announce that another amazing developer has joined the Riak Team. Join us in welcoming Jared Morrow!
The Riak Operations webinar covered many important topics with regards to running a production Riak cluster.
We are pleased to announce that Ryan Zezeski has joined the Riak Team! Ryan has been coding since 14 and was hooked after writing his first program in Visual Basic 3.0 …
Two of the best things about working with open-source software are being part of a community and collaborating with other skilled people. When your project becomes more than just a toy, you need others to help keep it going and to infuse fresh ideas into it.