I am going to open a ticket with INFRA because I don't think it is a local
cache issue. I get different results when I go to the page in different
browsers on different computers, it is weird.

/*******************************************
 Joe Stein
 Founder, Principal Consultant
 Big Data Open Source Security LLC
 http://www.stealth.ly
 Twitter: @allthingshadoop <http://www.twitter.com/allthingshadoop>
********************************************/

On Mon, Oct 27, 2014 at 9:07 PM, Jay Kreps <jay.kr...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Yeah it must be a caching thing because others in the same office do see it
> (but not all). And ctrl-shift-r doesn't seem to help. Nevermind :-)
>
> -Jay
>
> On Mon, Oct 27, 2014 at 6:00 PM, Gwen Shapira <gshap...@cloudera.com>
> wrote:
>
> > Strange. I'm seeing it.
> >
> > Browser cache?
> >
> > On Mon, Oct 27, 2014 at 5:59 PM, Jay Kreps <jay.kr...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > I actually don't see the beta release on that download page:
> > > http://kafka.apache.org/downloads.html
> > >
> > > -Jay
> > >
> > > On Mon, Oct 27, 2014 at 5:50 PM, Joe Stein <joest...@apache.org>
> wrote:
> > >
> > >> The Apache Kafka community is pleased to announce the beta release for
> > >> Apache Kafka 0.8.2.
> > >>
> > >> The 0.8.2-beta release introduces many new features, improvements and
> > >> fixes including:
> > >>  - A new Java producer for ease of implementation and enhanced
> > performance.
> > >>  - Delete topic support.
> > >>  - Per topic configuration of preference for consistency over
> > availability.
> > >>  - Scala 2.11 support and dropping support for Scala 2.8.
> > >>  - LZ4 Compression.
> > >>
> > >> All of the changes in this release can be found:
> > >> https://archive.apache.org/dist/kafka/0.8.2-beta/RELEASE_NOTES.html
> > >>
> > >> Apache Kafka is high-throughput, publish-subscribe messaging system
> > >> rethought of as a distributed commit log.
> > >>
> > >> ** Fast => A single Kafka broker can handle hundreds of megabytes of
> > reads
> > >> and
> > >> writes per second from thousands of clients.
> > >>
> > >> ** Scalable => Kafka is designed to allow a single cluster to serve as
> > the
> > >> central data backbone
> > >> for a large organization. It can be elastically and transparently
> > expanded
> > >> without downtime.
> > >> Data streams are partitioned and spread over a cluster of machines to
> > >> allow data streams
> > >> larger than the capability of any single machine and to allow clusters
> > of
> > >> co-ordinated consumers.
> > >>
> > >> ** Durable => Messages are persisted on disk and replicated within the
> > >> cluster to prevent
> > >> data loss. Each broker can handle terabytes of messages without
> > >> performance impact.
> > >>
> > >> ** Distributed by Design => Kafka has a modern cluster-centric design
> > that
> > >> offers
> > >> strong durability and fault-tolerance guarantees.
> > >>
> > >> You can download the release from:
> > http://kafka.apache.org/downloads.html
> > >>
> > >> We welcome your help and feedback. For more information on how to
> > >> report problems, and to get involved, visit the project website at
> > >> http://kafka.apache.org/
> > >>
> > >>
> >
>

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