April 10, 2006

IBM’s definition of native XML

IBM’s recent press release on Viper says:

Viper is expected to be the only database product able to seamlessly manage both conventional relational data and pure XML data without requiring the XML data to be reformatted or placed into a large object within the database.

That, so far as I know, is true, at least among major products.

I’m willing to apply the “native” label to Microsoft’s implementation anyway, because conceptually there’s little or no necessary performance difference between their approach and IBM’s. (Dang. I thought I posted more details on that months ago. I need to remedy the lack soon.)

As for Oracle — well, right now Oracle has a bit of a competitive problem

Comments

One Response to “IBM’s definition of native XML”

  1. Who is doing what in XML data management these days? | DBMS2 -- DataBase Management System Services on June 28th, 2008 12:50 am

    […] XML support hasn’t proved to be very important yet to the big DBMS vendors, somewhat to my surprise. When last I looked, the situation wasn’t much different from what it was back in November, […]

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