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    resource optimization

    Explore " resource optimization" with insightful episodes like "USING YOUR ERN-TUITION: Supply Chain Dynamics and Strategic Sourcing with Ernie Hernandez" and "Garbage Collection in Erlang vs JVM/Akka with Manuel Rubio & Dan Plyukhin" from podcasts like ""What the Duck - Another Supply Chain Podcast" and "Elixir Wizards"" and more!

    Episodes (2)

    USING YOUR ERN-TUITION: Supply Chain Dynamics and Strategic Sourcing with Ernie Hernandez

    USING YOUR ERN-TUITION: Supply Chain Dynamics and Strategic Sourcing with Ernie Hernandez

    In the episode of What the Duck?! Another Supply Chain Podcast, Sarah introduces Ernie, a long-time friend with a non-traditional career path that began in the army, leading to a specialization in supply chain management. Ernie’s journey includes roles in consulting, biotech, and logistics, offering insights into strategic sourcing and supply chain challenges in various industries. The discussion delves into his experiences in biotech, the intricacies of working in a highly regulated industry, and his time at HD Supply focusing on distribution and logistics.Tune in to hear Ernie’s career advice, emphasizing the importance of continuous learning and adapting to industry needs.

     

    SHOW HIGHLIGHTS

    Ernie’s Unique Career Trajectory

    Experiences in Supply Chain Management within the Military

    The Significance of Strategic Sourcing

    Challenges and Innovation within the BioTech Industry

    Impact of Regulatory Frameworks and SMPs 

    Nuances of Distribution and Logistics

    Ongoing Innovations in Energy and Life Sciences

    Emerging Industries and Trends 

     

    MOMENTS TO DUCK AROUND

    ERNIE: On Strategic Sourcing and Industry Challenges

    "I think it's the best of all worlds to do that type of work. So, that was about a decade of my life focused on all those things that I was doing for PWC and then IBM. It was an incredible proving ground for me."

     

    ERNIE: On Career Adaptation and Continuous Learning 

    “I think I've been lucky, and I think the reason I've been lucky is because I'm kind of fearless in some senses of the word. That I don't mind leaping into something that I know very little about, and I think I can figure it out real quickly."

     

    Connect with Ernie and learn what he’s been duckin’ around with:

    Ernie Hernandez | Rivian

     

    Connect with Sarah and find out more about what the duck she’s up to

    LinkedIn |Twitter |SourceDay |SourceDay.com

     

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    Garbage Collection in Erlang vs JVM/Akka with Manuel Rubio & Dan Plyukhin

    Garbage Collection in Erlang vs JVM/Akka with Manuel Rubio & Dan Plyukhin
    Today on Elixir Wizards, Manuel Rubio, author of Erlang/OTP: A Concurrent World and Dan Plyukhin, creator of the UIGC Actor Garbage Collector for Akka, join host Dan Ivovich to compare notes on garbage collection in actor models. The discussion digs into the similarities and differences of actor-based garbage collection in Erlang and Akka and introduces Dan's research on how to perform garbage collection in a distributed actor system. Topics discussed: Akka is akin to Erlang actors for the JVM using Scala, with similar principles like supervision trees, messages, and clustering Erlang uses generational garbage collection and periodically copies live data to the old heap for long-lived elements Actor GC aims to determine when an actor's memory can be reclaimed automatically rather than manually killing actors Distributed actor GC is more challenging than object GC due to the distributed nature and relationships between actors across nodes Challenges include reasoning about failures like dropped messages and crashed nodes GC balance requires optimization of resource release and CPU load management Immutability helps Erlang GC, but copying data for messages impacts performance Research into distributed actor GC is still ongoing, with opportunities for improvement Fault tolerance in Erlang relies on user implementation rather than low-level guarantees Asynchronous messages in Erlang/Elixir mean references may become invalid which is similar to the distributed GC approaches in Dan's research Idempotent messaging is recommended to handle possible duplicates from failures Help your local researcher! Researchers encourage communication from practitioners on challenges and use cases Links mentioned: Erlang/OTP Volume 1: A Concurrent World by Manuel Rubio https://altenwald.com/en/book/en-erlang-i  Scala https://www.scala-lang.org/  Akka Framework https://github.com/akka  JVM (Java Virtual Machine) https://www.java.com/en/download/  The BEAM VM https://www.erlang.org/blog/a-brief-beam-primer/ Hadoop Framework https://hadoop.apache.org/   Pony Programming Language https://www.ponylang.io/  SLSA Programming Language https://wcl.cs.rpi.edu/salsa/#:~:text=SALSA%20 Paxos Algorithm https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paxos(computerscience)  Raft library for maintaining a replicated state machine https://github.com/etcd-io/raft  Dan's Website https://dplyukhin.github.io/  Dan Plyukhin on Twitter: https://twitter.com/dplyukhin  Dan Plyukhin’s YouTube channel: https://m.youtube.com/@dplyukhin UIGC on GitHub https://github.com/dplyukhin/UIGC  Manuel's Website https://altenwald.com/  Manuel Rubio on Twitter: https://twitter.com/MRonErlang Special Guests: Dan Plyukhin and Manuel Rubio.
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