Hi, Thanks for your opinion. - Not every user uses spark and - Some users might want to connect standalone Zeppelin with their existing JDBC, elasticsearch, and so on.
That article might be too basic for you or advanced users. But I believe our community has beginners and they can grow community more. You might directly comment on the article about your points. Regard, On Sat, Sep 23, 2017 at 3:50 AM, Ken Barclay <kbarc...@ancestry.com> wrote: > Thanks for that link Park – I think I’m missing something though: It’s > useful to know more about how to configure Zeppelin, but what’s the point > of installing Zeppelin on an EC2 instance? Don’t you need to point it to a > Spark cluster? And if you’re going to run your queries against a cluster, > and you’re using AWS, wouldn’t it make more sense to select Zeppelin and > Spark as applications to deploy on EMR, which gets you both Zeppelin and > cluster to run it against? > > > > *From: *Park Hoon <1am...@gmail.com> > *Reply-To: *"users@zeppelin.apache.org" <users@zeppelin.apache.org> > *Date: *Friday, September 22, 2017 at 10:18 AM > *To: *"users@zeppelin.apache.org" <users@zeppelin.apache.org> > *Subject: *How to setup Zeppelin in AWS EC2 > > > > Hi @users, > > Andrew C. Oliver <https://www.infoworld.com/author/Andrew-C.-Oliver/> wrote > an article *"How to set up Zeppelin for analytics and visualization in > Amazon’s EC2"* in InfoWorld > > > > - https://www.infoworld.com/article/3226734/analytics/how- > to-set-up-zeppelin-for-analytics-and-visualization.html > > > > This article covers the full steps (creating EC2, configure shiro, ...) so > that could be helpful for users who want to setup Zeppelin for their team > on AWS. > > > > Regard, >