March 14, 2010

Toward a NoSQL taxonomy

I talked Friday with Dwight Merriman, founder of 10gen (the MongoDB company). He more or less convinced me of his definition of NoSQL systems, which in my adaptation goes:

NoSQL = HVSP (High Volume Simple Processing) without joins or explicit transactions

Within that realm, Dwight offered a two-part taxonomy of NoSQL systems, according to their data model and replication/sharding strategy. I’d be happier, however, with at least three parts to the taxonomy:

March 13, 2010

The Naming of the Foo

Let’s start from some reasonable premises. Read more

March 12, 2010

Some NoSQL links

I plan to post a few things soon about MongoDB, Cassandra, and NoSQL in general. So I’m poking around a bit reading stuff on the subjects. Here are some links I found. Read more

March 2, 2010

Cassandra and the NoSQL scalable OLTP argument

Todd Hoff put up a provocative post on High Scalability called MySQL and Memcached: End of an Era? The post itself focuses on observations like:

But in addition, he provides a lot of useful links, which DBMS-oriented folks such as myself might have previously overlooked. Read more

February 26, 2010

Another reason to expect number-crunching and big-data management to converge

Dan Olds argues that Oracle is likely to pursue commercially-substantive high performance computing (HPC), emphasis mine: Read more

February 25, 2010

Notes on Sybase Adaptive Server Enterprise

It had been a very long time since I was remotely up to speed on Sybase’s main OLTP DBMS, Adaptive Server Enterprise (ASE).  Raj Rathee, however, was kind enough to fill me in a few days ago. Highlights of our chat included: Read more

February 22, 2010

February 2010 data warehouse DBMS news roundup

February is usually a busy month for data warehouse DBMS product releases, product announcements, and other real or contrived data warehouse DBMS news, and it can get pretty confusing trying to keep those categories of “news” apart.*  This year is no exception, although several vendors – including Teradata and Netezza – are taking “rolling thunder” approaches, doing some of their announcements this month while holding others back for March or April.

*I probably have it worse than most people in that regard, because my clients run tentative feature lists and announcement schedules by me well in advance, which may get changed multiple times before the final dates roll around. I also occasionally miss some detail, if it wasn’t in a pre-briefing but gets added at the end.

Anyhow, the three big themes of this month’s announcements are probably:

Read more

February 22, 2010

TwinFin(i) – Netezza’s version of a parallel analytic platform

Much like Aster Data did in Aster 4.0 and now Aster 4.5, Netezza is announcing a general parallel big data analytic platform strategy. It is called Netezza TwinFin(i), it is a chargeable option for the Netezza TwinFin appliance, and many announced details are on the vague side, with Netezza promising more clarity at or before its Enzee Universe conference in June. At a high level, the Aster and Netezza approaches compare/contrast as follows: Read more

February 22, 2010

Aster Data nCluster 4.5

Like Vertica, Netezza, and Teradata, Aster is using this week to pre-announce a forthcoming product release, Aster Data nCluster 4.5. Aster is really hanging its identity on “Big Data Analytics” or some variant of that concept, and so the two major named parts of Aster nCluster 4.5 are:

And in other Aster news:

Aster Data Developer Express evidently does some cool stuff, like providing some sort of parallelism testing right on your desktop. It also generates lots of stub code, saving humans from the tedium of doing that. Useful, obviously.

But mainly, I want to write about the analytic packages. Read more

February 22, 2010

Vertica 4.0

Vertica briefed me last month on its forthcoming Vertica 4.0 release. I think it’s fair to say that Vertica 4.0 is mainly a cleanup/catchup release, washing away some of the tradeoffs Vertica had previously made in support of its innovative DBMS architecture.

For starters, there’s a lot of new analytic functionality. This isn’t Aster/Netezza-style ambitious. Rather, there’s a lot more SQL-99 functionality, plus some time series extensions of the sort that financial services firms – an important market for Vertica – need and love. Vertica did suggest a couple of these time series extensions are innovative, but I haven’t yet gotten detail about those.

Perhaps even more important, Vertica is cleaning up a lot of its previous SQL optimization and execution weirdnesses. In no particular order, I was told: Read more

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