I recently read a blog discussing the fever to declare Hadoop as dead. While I agreed with the premise of the blog, I didn't agree with some of its conclusions. In summary, the conclusion was that if Hadoop is too complex you are using the wrong interface. I agree at face-value with that conclusion, but in my opinion, the user-interface only addresses a part of the complexity and the management of a Hadoop deployment is still a complex undertaking. Time to value is important for enterprise customers, so this is why the tooling above Hadoop was such an early pain-point. The core Hadoop vendors wanted to focus on how processes executed and programming paradigms and seemed to ignore the interface to Hadoop. Much of that stems from the desire for Hadoop to be the operating system for Big Data. There was even a push to make it the compute cluster manager for all-things in the Enterprise. This effort, and others like it, tried to expand the footprint of commercial distributions...
Blogs about the technologies I am working with.