Wednesday | 3 December, 2008
Facebook seeks trusted relationships on the 'Net
Facebook's director of engineering dissects product design, development and search efforts at Facebook
Paul Krill (InfoWorld) 04/07/2008 09:57:22

Slide, a personal media network, has used Facebook as a Web vehicle. iLike discovery service has used Facebook for a music discovery service. Is Facebook surprised by businesses that are using Facebook to grow their businesses?

Agarwal: I'm not entirely surprised because I think that Facebook has -- it's such an important and useful communications utility -- but more than that, it also has an incredible amount of distribution. Like the distribution engine in the form of [Facebook] News Feed and all of the different other platform integration points that we offer. It's pretty compelling in terms of having a vehicle to kick-start the growth of a particular service or an application, which I guess which is just simply not provided in Web 1.0.

You've sort of mentioned this with Thrift, but what type of developer services does Facebook offer?

Agarwal: If you're a Facebook platform application developer, then obviously we have a number of client libraries. And the approach that we have taken is that we support some of the client libraries internally, but by and large, we let the developer community contribute client libraries in different languages because we feel that they are in a better position to maintain and optimize those particular client libraries. We have a suite of open source software, also, that we are happy to share with developers, Thrift being the major one there. We are going to be releasing a new open source software package called Scribe, which is a distributed logging framework that we use extensively in-house. We thought that we would give that back to the community as well. And a lot of the other open source projects that we work on that are not -- that were not created by us but we have contributed heavily to, such as memcached and obviously Apache, MySQL, and so on.

Does Facebook have any plans to participate in Google's OpenSocial Initiative? I know you've been a hold-out on that.

Agarwal: Actually, once again, I think that somebody from the platform product marketing team would probably be the best person to answer that.

I heard a presentation last week about Enterprise 2.0 and enterprise social networking. During the presentation, a Serena Software representative said the company is using Facebook as its collaboration platform. Is that something that's pretty widespread? Do you expect it to grow? And once again, is that something that Facebook would have expected three years ago?

Agarwal: It doesn't surprise me because, once again, a lot of our internal world view and how we approach the products that we build is that we want to be enablers for external applications, but also we are [a] communications utility. We are facilitating interactions between people. And for me, when you talk about enterprise collaboration software, that is one aspect of that. And what we build should allow developers and users alike to benefit in terms of building applications that provide that functionality and for users to actually be able to utilize that particular functionality.

How do you respond to criticism that the Facebook platform is a closed platform?

Agarwal: I will take an initial stab at answering the question, but I'm going to have to defer to the platform product marketing team. I think that I don't view it as a closed system. I actually view it as an enabler in the sense that we are enabling the ability for external Web sites and the application that you earlier mentioned to provide a compelling user experience in the form of new functionality. So I'm not quite sure I would view it as a closed platform.

What can you say about the infrastructure at Facebook? What powers Facebook?

Agarwal: I'd be happy to talk about that. We have two different kinds of code stacks, and I think I described one earlier, which is primarily running on Thrift and some other kind of core component that we have. The other part of our stack is something you mentioned briefly in your question, which is a kind of a LAMP stack, obviously running a Linux kernel. We modify that to be more optimized for our purposes, and then after that we are running the Apache Web server, we're running PHP, and we're running memcached, which is a distributed in-memory hash table. And we have 25TB of in-memory cache, which is kind of where more than 95 percent of our data access comes from. And we have MySQL, which is a persistence store on the back end, and we obviously dabble heavily in each of the underlying technologies to make them more efficient, make them more [higher performing] and basically help in scaling

Computerworld Buyer's Guide - Vendors Matched to this Article
Computerworld Buyer's Guide - Vendors Matched to this Article
Additional Resources
Executive Guides
Whitepapers
Zones
Zone logoZones provide focussed content from Computerworld and leading technology partners.
Newsletter Subscription
Sign up for our Computerworld newsletters!
RSS Feeds

Comments

No doubt it started after

No doubt it started after Orkut but has gone beyond it and is still leading and gains more trust as said!

------------------------
sea plants...sea grapes...plant roots...phytoplanktons...sea plant pictures...seagrass...seaweed...easy aquarium plants...deep sea plants...Limu Moui...Landscaping...End of sea plants...underwater plants...Sea coral...Sea crabs

No doubt it started after

No doubt it started after Orkut but has gone beyond it and is still leading and gains more trust as said!

------------------------
sea plants...sea grapes...plant roots...phytoplanktons...sea plant pictures...seagrass...seaweed...easy aquarium plants...deep sea plants...Limu Moui...Landscaping...End of sea plants...underwater plants...Sea coral...Sea crabs

Market Place

 

Smart SOA World Tour

Discover how SOA can create smarter outcomes for your business.

Attend and learn:

  • How SOA is helping leading companies to become more agile
  • Where you should be applying SOA processes in your company
  • The top SOA implementation mistakes to avoid

Click here for more information.
Whitepaper

Wireless LANs: Is my enterprise at risk?

Achieve an overall understanding of the risks associated with wireless LANs. Discover their inherent properties, as well as what makes them different from wired networks. Read on to uncover a list of recently published articles on real-life breaches and incidents illustrating the need for proactive measures to mitigate wireless security risks.

Enterprise IT Buyer's Guide
Find Technology Vendors Fast
 
Find vendors by name | Find by category
Sponsored Links