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by kingkongjaffa
1025 days ago
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Other than DDIA do you have a heuristic for finding the older papers? I often look for the seminal works but it’s hard when you don’t know who the key people are in a new field. Do you just look for highest number of citations on google scholar or something else? For example in the world of engines, Heywood is basically god: (https://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&as_sdt=0%2C5&q=John...) has 29k citations! |
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"Network partitioning can completely destroy mutual consistency in the worst case, and this fact has led to a certain amount of restrictiveness, vagueness, and even nervousness in past discussions, of how it may be handled"
https://pages.cs.wisc.edu/~remzi/Classes/739/Fall2015/Papers...
But as a general starting point, all roads seem to lead to Lamport 78 (Time, Clocks). If you have a specific area of interest I or others might be able to point you in the right direction.