Wtf (“Who to Follow”) is Twitter’s user recommendation service, which is responsible for creating millions of connec-tions daily between users based on shared interests, common connections, and other related factors. This paper provides an architectural overview and shares lessons we learned in building and running the service over the past few years. Particularly noteworthy was our design decision to process the entire Twitter graph in memory on a single server, which significantly reduced architectural complexity and allowed us to develop and deploy the service in only a few months. At the core of our architecture is Cassovary, an open-source in-memory graph processing engine we built from scratch for Wtf. Besides powering Twitter’s user ...
The growing number of users in microblogging sites such as Twitter has created the problem of search...
Abstract. Twitter is a social information network where short messages or tweets are shared among a ...
Paper presented at the 22nd Irish Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Cognitive Science (AICS ...
Wtf (“Who to Follow”) is Twitter’s user recommendation service, which is responsible for creating mi...
The huge number of modern social network users has made the web a fertile ground for the growth and ...
Quite a number of recent works have concentrated on the task of recommending to Twitter users whom t...
Paper presented at the 4th ACM Conference on Recommender Systems (RecSys 2010), Barcelona, Spain, Se...
Friend recommendation algorithms in large-scale social networks such as Facebook or Twitter usually...
The creation of new and better recommendation algorithms for social networks is currently receiving ...
In everyday life, we keep receiving recommendations from others either by words of mouth, press prin...
We describe a production Twitter system for generating relevant, personalized, and timely recommenda...
Presented at the 33rd European Conference on Information Retrieval (ECIR-11), DCU, Dublin, Ireland, ...
twitter.com/archimast In this paper we explore a tool that allows you to explore your social network...
Social media websites have become extremely popular among online users in recent years. Surveys perf...
Twitter has become an important social platform for individuals and people share a high number of in...
The growing number of users in microblogging sites such as Twitter has created the problem of search...
Abstract. Twitter is a social information network where short messages or tweets are shared among a ...
Paper presented at the 22nd Irish Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Cognitive Science (AICS ...
Wtf (“Who to Follow”) is Twitter’s user recommendation service, which is responsible for creating mi...
The huge number of modern social network users has made the web a fertile ground for the growth and ...
Quite a number of recent works have concentrated on the task of recommending to Twitter users whom t...
Paper presented at the 4th ACM Conference on Recommender Systems (RecSys 2010), Barcelona, Spain, Se...
Friend recommendation algorithms in large-scale social networks such as Facebook or Twitter usually...
The creation of new and better recommendation algorithms for social networks is currently receiving ...
In everyday life, we keep receiving recommendations from others either by words of mouth, press prin...
We describe a production Twitter system for generating relevant, personalized, and timely recommenda...
Presented at the 33rd European Conference on Information Retrieval (ECIR-11), DCU, Dublin, Ireland, ...
twitter.com/archimast In this paper we explore a tool that allows you to explore your social network...
Social media websites have become extremely popular among online users in recent years. Surveys perf...
Twitter has become an important social platform for individuals and people share a high number of in...
The growing number of users in microblogging sites such as Twitter has created the problem of search...
Abstract. Twitter is a social information network where short messages or tweets are shared among a ...
Paper presented at the 22nd Irish Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Cognitive Science (AICS ...