tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8823971303123593651.post1925240800058812175..comments2023-03-31T05:24:27.406-07:00Comments on Kevin Schmidt's Blog: Event Processing in the Cloud - Combining Esper with AWS SNSKevin Schmidthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05366406313485961849noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8823971303123593651.post-42143348938332306522011-11-22T06:59:09.962-08:002011-11-22T06:59:09.962-08:00I'd also be interested in a peek.
How did you...I'd also be interested in a peek.<br /><br />How did you convert from the JSON object back into a java object. I'm assuming the java object doesn't exist on the esper server.roaanhttp://twitter.com/codeshrinknoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8823971303123593651.post-51687946828991004472011-03-18T16:04:37.056-07:002011-03-18T16:04:37.056-07:00I'd be interested in taking a peek (if this is...I'd be interested in taking a peek (if this is on, say, Github or whatever). <br /><br />We are doing something similar, but in our case we're connecting to the API after pulling XML messages via JMS. The content of the messages themselves is very similar to your line in #4.<br /><br />Cool stuff!andyhttp://twitter.com/virtualandynoreply@blogger.com