Talk:Terracotta Cluster

So-so OK
The article is somewhat informative but not too provocative for a compsci geek. Following fixes needs doing: ... said: Rursus (bork²) 10:16, 22 January 2009 (UTC)
 * "which simplifies ... immensely", boasts; insert an "is intended to" or such that reflects the intent of the designers,
 * "fine-grained" has no actual meaning, but is reflecting an intent of design, it should be replaced by a description to what levels the JVM-level clustering is actually possible,
 * the entire article needs expansion, now its sentences are stacks of features, f.ex. "Terracotta's JVM-level clustering can turn single-node, multi-threaded applications into distributed, multi-node applications, often with no code changes.", which needs to be replaced by multiple sentence describing what the thingie does in detail and what this accomplishes.

I found this useful
Sorry about anonymous post, but I can't remember my login info... Anyway, no doubt this article could be improved, but I was looking for exactly the information I got... (What the hell is this thing: A shared memory clustering technology that works at the JVM bytecode level). So, I don't know much about this technology yet, and this could use some more detail and perhaps links to explain specific techniques, but the bottom line is this was fairly to the point. I think the thing it needs is links to other articles. A link to a discussion of shared nothing / shared everything scaling debate, a link to garbage collection perhaps ... Maybe a brief mention of alternate methodologies for sharing data / scaling in java.

So, please don't delete much, just add context to it. my $.02

Garick —Preceding unsigned comment added by 128.91.197.64 (talk) 17:23, 8 May 2009 (UTC)

Merge article with Terracotta, Inc.
Rather than deleting the article, I think it would be good to merge the content from here into Terracotta, Inc., until there is enough information for its own article. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Jdstroy (talk • contribs) 22:04, 27 August 2011 (UTC)