I've used javaspaces a fair bit in high-flexibility situations, although 
not in a truly high-scale situation. I am aware of truly high-scale 
implementations. Just be careful extrapolating from one case to another.

Contact the apache river folks for detailed reports of javaspaces in 
high-scale...

http://river.apache.org/




On Thursday, December 13, 2012 4:36:55 PM UTC-8, raould wrote:
>
> > Another concurrency model I've used a great deal is the tuplespace 
> model, specifically javaspaces. This is an often forgotten model that has a 
> lot to offer with a high expressiveness to complexity ratio. 
>
> otish: 
>
> in the back of my mind i seem to recall hearing that tuplespaces 
> sounded nifty but quickly ran into brick walls. i'm trying to search 
> up some results about that, but so far have only found e.g. 
>
> http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.39.744 
>
> which mentions some of the suck. there's probably other / more / 
> different suck about tuple spaces, or to put it another way, it is 
> always good to know what types of things a given approach is and is 
> not good for :-) 
>

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