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[Paid Course] Snowpal Education: Asynchronous Messaging With RabbitMQ

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Manage episode 385465663 series 3530865
Content provided by Krish Palaniappan and Varun Palaniappan, Krish Palaniappan, and Varun Palaniappan. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Krish Palaniappan and Varun Palaniappan, Krish Palaniappan, and Varun Palaniappan or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

What you do not need to do “real time”, you should try not to do real time for a variety of reasons. In this course, we’ll look at a specific implementation that uses RabbitMQ as a Message Broker to better understand the pros and cons of various alternatives, including but not limited to whether or not you need to use messaging at all to solve such a problem.

We’ll touch upon Kafka a tiny, tiny bit but keep our focus primarily to Messaging Architecture in general, and RabbitMQ as a broker in particular. By the end of this course, you should be in a position to tell when you need to use a Message Broker, which one you may want to use, and how you should go about using it.

While what we’ll look at is a Ruby Microservice implementation, the learning would be just as applicable to other brokers and other languages.

Purchase course in one of 2 ways:

1. Go to https://getsnowpal.com, and purchase it on the Web

2. On your phone:

(i) If you are an iPhone user, go to http://ios.snowpal.com, and watch the course on the go.

(ii). If you are an Android user, go to http://android.snowpal.com.

  continue reading

198 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 385465663 series 3530865
Content provided by Krish Palaniappan and Varun Palaniappan, Krish Palaniappan, and Varun Palaniappan. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Krish Palaniappan and Varun Palaniappan, Krish Palaniappan, and Varun Palaniappan or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

What you do not need to do “real time”, you should try not to do real time for a variety of reasons. In this course, we’ll look at a specific implementation that uses RabbitMQ as a Message Broker to better understand the pros and cons of various alternatives, including but not limited to whether or not you need to use messaging at all to solve such a problem.

We’ll touch upon Kafka a tiny, tiny bit but keep our focus primarily to Messaging Architecture in general, and RabbitMQ as a broker in particular. By the end of this course, you should be in a position to tell when you need to use a Message Broker, which one you may want to use, and how you should go about using it.

While what we’ll look at is a Ruby Microservice implementation, the learning would be just as applicable to other brokers and other languages.

Purchase course in one of 2 ways:

1. Go to https://getsnowpal.com, and purchase it on the Web

2. On your phone:

(i) If you are an iPhone user, go to http://ios.snowpal.com, and watch the course on the go.

(ii). If you are an Android user, go to http://android.snowpal.com.

  continue reading

198 episodes

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