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Netflix Ditched Kafka for THIS in CQRS

Netflix Ditched Kafka for THIS in CQRS

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Netflix recently rebuilt Tudum by rethinking their CQRS implementation. They moved away from Kafka and Cassandra to a new in-memory approach using RAW Hollow. Let me break down what their architecture and clear up a few misconceptions about CQRS, what it really means (and what it doesn’t), why Netflix made this change, and the key lessons you can apply to your own systems. πŸ”— Kurrent (formely EventStoreDB) https://kurrent.io πŸ”” Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3RKA4vunFAfrfxiJhPEplw?sub_confirmation=1 πŸ’₯ Join this channel to get access to a private Discord Server and any source code in my videos. πŸ”₯ Join via Patreon https://www.patreon.com/codeopinion βœ”οΈ Join via YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC3RKA4vunFAfrfxiJhPEplw/join πŸ“ Blog: https://codeopinion.com πŸ‘‹ Twitter: https://twitter.com/codeopinion ✨ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dcomartin/ πŸ“§ Weekly Updates: https://mailchi.mp/63c7a0b3ff38/codeopinion 0:00 Existing Architecture 3:27 Typical Implementation 4:43 Mi

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