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Home/ Questions/Q 6719947
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 26, 20262026-05-26T09:09:12+00:00 2026-05-26T09:09:12+00:00

What is the basic difference between Memcached and Hadoop? Microsoft seems to do memcached

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What is the basic difference between Memcached and Hadoop? Microsoft seems to do memcached with the Windows Server AppFabric.

I know memcached is a giant key value hashing function using multiple servers. What is hadoop and how is hadoop different from memcached? Is it used to store data? objects? I need to save giant in memory objects, but it seems like I need some kind of way of splitting this giant objects into “chunks” like people are talking about. When I look into splitting the object into bytes, it seems like Hadoop is popping up.

I have a giant class in memory with upwards of 100 mb in memory. I need to replicate this object, cache this object in some fashion. When I look into caching this monster object, it seems like I need to split it like how google is doing. How is google doing this. How can hadoop help me in this regard. My objects are not simple structured data. It has references up and down the classes inside, etc.

Any idea, pointers, thoughts, guesses are helpful.

Thanks.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-26T09:09:13+00:00Added an answer on May 26, 2026 at 9:09 am

    memcached [ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memcached ] is a single focused distributed caching technology.

    apache hadoop [ http://hadoop.apache.org/ ] is a framework for distributed data processing – targeted at google/amazon scale many terrabytes of data. It includes sub-projects for the different areas of this problem – distributed database, algorithm for distributed processing, reporting/querying, data-flow language.

    The two technologies tackle different problems. One is for caching (small or large items) across a cluster. And the second is for processing large items across a cluster. From your question it sounds like memcached is more suited to your problem.

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