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I am planning to write an internal large video sharing website.

Could anyone point me to a resource or article that shows how to plan such a large application development and deployment?

Does anyone have a detailed outline on what YouTube is using as their programming language, video servers, etc...?

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Was this worth asking twice: stackoverflow.com/questions/762052/… – Matt Grande Apr 17 at 20:25
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He's asking about more than the language, but the server topology as well. Still not programming related though. – Ben S Apr 17 at 20:26
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It is program related enough. Its about software development. Which is enough. – Gamecat Apr 17 at 20:46

8 Answers

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http://highscalability.com/youtube-architecture

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Thanks for removing the Digg bar, Ben S. – ceejayoz Apr 17 at 20:26
I loathe that thing. – Ben S Apr 17 at 20:26
/shrug, I just copied and pasted the link from my browser. Don't have time to be worried about that stuff – Chris Apr 17 at 20:27
that recipe for success made me chuckle – dotjoe Apr 17 at 20:50
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YouTube was developed in python

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YouTube Platform:

Apache

Python

Linux

MySql

psyco, a dynamic python->C compiler

lighttpd for video instead of Apache

for more info on YouTube Architecture

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At one point, they were using lighttpd for serving up flash video content. Their HTTP headers indicate they're using Apache for a lot of pages. Their help system runs on python, but I think all of Google's help stuff runs on that, so that's no real surprise. Beyond that, I think it's safe to say there's a lot of in-house technology, no doubt courtesy of Google.

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good answer, its great that you looked into http headers to know who is serving content..! – bugBurger Apr 17 at 20:35
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10 million hamsters running in little hamster wheels.

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That's just to power the servers – Tester101 Apr 17 at 20:36
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Yes, but the're turing hamsters. – Don Werve Apr 17 at 20:54
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python power

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If I can give you one advise: start small!

Large projects have the tendency to take a long time to finish. If you start small, you have some kind of proof of concept first. So you can extend it piece by piece.

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Start small, yes, but plan for scalability. It's very easy to make a small project that is totally unscaleable. – Ben S Apr 17 at 20:51
Of course. You should think of the near future. Even smal steps benefit from a well paved road. – Gamecat Apr 17 at 20:57
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Pigeon's http://www.google.com/technology/pigeonrank.html

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