What you do not need to do “real time”, you should try not to do real time for a variety of reasons. In this course, we’ll look at a specific implementation that uses RabbitMQ as a Message Broker to better understand the pros and cons of various alternatives, including but not limited to whether or not you need to use messaging at all to solve such a problem.
We’ll touch upon Kafka a tiny, tiny bit but keep our focus primarily to Messaging Architecture in general, and RabbitMQ as a broker in particular. By the end of this course, you should be in a position to tell when you need to use a Message Broker, which one you may want to use, and how you should go about using it.
While what we’ll look at is a Ruby Microservice implementation, the learning would be just as applicable to other brokers and other languages.
Purchase course in one of 2 ways:
1. Go to https://getsnowpal.com, and purchase it on the Web
2. On your phone:
(i) If you are an iPhone user, go to http://ios.snowpal.com, and watch the course on the go.
(ii). If you are an Android user, go to http://android.snowpal.com.
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