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By gst
via royal.pingdom.com
Published: Sep 29 2007 / 05:38

Have you ever wondered what technology some of the really big websites use? The likes of Digg, YouTube, Myspace and so on? There is a very interesting website called High Scalability that is dedicated to, as they put it themselves, “building bigger, faster, more reliable websites.” They collect information about the architecture of high-traffic websites to serve as examples to others. -- Underlying technology breakdown -- We used some of the data from High Scalability to create a table with the OS, web server, scripting language and database used by nine of the largest websites in the world. The ones we selected were Flickr, YouTube, PlentyOfFish, Digg, TypePad, LiveJournal, Friendster, MySpace, Wikipedia.
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User 233461 avatar

antych replied ago:

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Largest websites? Where's Yahoo and many others?
Ruby didn't make it, no surprise there :)

User 229717 avatar

mutle replied ago:

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You conveniently let out sites like Yahoo and Google, who use their own custom system. Not every site uses SQL at all for example.

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reybango replied ago:

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He listed nine large sites. Not once did he mention that the list comprised "THE" largest sites on the net. The info is good and can be a help to anyone interested in understanding the underpinnings of these specific sites.

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sproketboy replied ago:

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LOL, what a joke!

http://www.highscalability.com/
The site could be temporarily unavailable or too busy. Try again in a few
moments.

User 151310 avatar

mawcs replied ago:

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plentyoffish? friendster? I don't think these even rank in the top 100. The selection of sites is arbitrary

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