I would say that it depends upon what you mean by persistence. I don't
believe Kafka is intended to be your permanent data store, but it would
work if you were basically write once with appropriate query patterns. It
would be an odd way to describe it though.

Christian

On Fri, Sep 12, 2014 at 4:05 PM, Stephen Boesch <java...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hi Patrick,   Kafka can be used at any scale including small ones
> (initially anyways). The issues I ran into personally various issues with
> ZooKeeper management and a bug in deleting topics (is that fixed yet?)  In
> any case you might try out Kafka  - given its highly performant, scalable,
> and flexible backbone.   After that you will have little worry about scale
> - given Kafka's use within massive web scale deployments.
>
> 2014-09-12 15:18 GMT-07:00 Patrick Barker <patrickbarke...@gmail.com>:
>
> > Hey, I'm new to kafka and I'm trying to get a handle on how it all
> works. I
> > want to integrate polyglot persistence into my application. Kafka looks
> > like exactly what I want just on a smaller scale. I am currently only
> > dealing with about 2,000 users, which may grow,  but is kafka a good use
> > case here, or is there another technology thats better suited?
> >
> > Thanks
> >
>

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