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    Thanks to Relax1

    New PDF from Tata Communications describing the Sponsored Data Exchange in more detail.

    https://www.tatacommunications.com/sites/default/files/SP-SDX-ds-104716.pdf

    Thanks to Relax1

    Just to make things interesting.

    Once the Tata Communications SDX is live (which Syntonic technology underpins), Gary intends to launch both of our first party apps, Freeway and Dataflex, on this exchange network.

    Syntonic will therefore be a premier content provider for driving the Tata Communications exchange network.

    It is a win-win for Syntonic. Tata Communications will be able to quickly scale worldwide to telcos/subscribers/content they already have relationships with. Freeway and Dataflex will gain exposure to these markets leading to accelerated growth.

    Freeway and Dataflex will generate profits for Syntonic.
    Additionally, Syntonic will profit share in the vicinity of 22.5% of revenues that pass through the SDX due to the white-label agreement with Tata.
    Thanks to Relax1

    Tata Communications now appears ready to go with their SDX launch.

    https://www.tatacommunications.com/sites/default/files/MOB-sponsored-data-exchange-ds-129506.pdf
    https://www.tatacommunications.com/sites/default/files/MOB-mobile-data-exchange-ds-129565.pdf

    In regards to some completed programming work done for the Tata Communications SDX.

    http://npras.in/portfolio/tata/


    Sponsor Quota Manager for Sponsored Data Exchange

    When did you work on this project?

    8 months from May to December 2016.
    What is this project about?

    The project was conceived based on a patent developed and owned by the client. They came with a design plan and a list of deliverables scheduled to be delivered over the next 3 months. Tata initially preferred this be done using Python and Django, as the lead Architects at the client-side were only familiar with that. But we convinced them to do it in Ruby and Rails.
    The project is to allow Tata to venture into the Sponsored Data Exchange business in their telecom vertical in USA. It is a service and system for providing sponsored data, wherein the data usage is not charged to a mobile subscriber but, rather, paid for by a sponsor.
    Who was the client?

    Tata Communications (America) Inc.
    What did you do exactly?

    In a span of 4 months, I implemented 3 projects (2 Rails, 1 RubyScript), designed a cloud-scale infrastructure, and then deployed them to the cloud using modern devops tools.
    I lead a team of 3, did over 80% of the design and development. I was responsible for client communication for requirement gathering and status reporting.
    In the first phase, I built the 2 Rails apps that exposed many APIs. I used Rails 5. Based on the client’s high-level model requirements, I designed the low-level database and entities with relationships. I had to take care of all query performances too. I wrote test cases for all APIs and made sure the test coverage is over 90%. I also used rubo-cop gem to enforce a coding standard among all members of the team.
    For billing requirements, the client wanted to use a NoSql DB too, apart from the traditional Mysql RDBMS. We chose AWS’s DynamoDB, and implemented the right partition and sort keys that would prove crucial to building the RubyScript app later on.
    In the second phase, I designed and deployed the infrastructure required to scale this project in the future, in AWS.
    • I used Opsworks to setup these 3 app in 3 different stacks.
    • I wrote custom Chef recipes, when Opsworks’ in-built Chef Recipes fell short.
    • I defined a secure architecture where these apps would run within AWS: I created
      • VPC,
      • private and public subnets,
      • route tables and routes to define traffic among them,
      • NAT Gateway and Internet Gateway to enable the network to talk to internet,
      • Security Groups to control access to ports,
      • Elastic Loadbalancers to distribute traffic among multiple instances running the same application,
      • Cloudwatch metrics and alarms to watch important KPIs
      • Setup Loadbased Autoscaling instances that would come to life when the load on app -instances go beyond a certain threshold
      • Defined IAM Users and Roles to provide/restrict access to these resources
    Process/Technologies Used

    • Rails 5, Ruby 2.3.1, MySql 5.6
    • AASM Statemachine for implementing complex state transitions
    • MacOS for development, Ubuntu for Server
    • Chef 11.10 in AWS Opsworks
    • AWS Services - RDS, EC2, Elastic Loadbalancers, Elastic IPs, Opsworks, IAM, Cloudwatch alarms etc
    • Agile approach with weekly scrum meetings with the client, and twice-a-week meeting internally.
    • Since the client was in USA, I worked remotely in the project.
    How did your work impact the company?

    The client was able to take the final version of the deliverables and showcase it to a few enterprise customers (sponsors) who have expressed interest in this product. This is set out to become a multi-million dollar project in 2017, deployed around various parts of the world.
    Was the client happy?

    The client was extremely satisfied with my work and appreciated the delivery on time. In many places in the initial design spec, we faced issues. The alternative technical solutions I proposed went well with the client who agreed to incorporate these changes in their design doc.

    It was easy to find these and post as it all came from the one person, but thought I would chuck on here again anyway
    Wished I could have put the red box yellow box simplified explanation but can't figure out how to copy and paste pictures
    Sorry
 
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