Re: Questions about Postgres and Oracle
Date: Thu, 6 Dec 2012 11:53:35 -0500
Message-ID: <CAJ7936x0qX7d873nQxABCmKwbSq-Mfh+7d1O59MOKrGBDz_7mA_at_mail.gmail.com>
That's been my experience too, looking across the customer spectrum. 10 years ago, it was about 70% Oracle/30% SQL Server. About 5-7 years ago it was 50% Oracle 50% SQL Server. Then MySQL started to show up in the enterprise, as did Postgres. Now basically all of our big customers are running at least three, and as many as six different database platforms. And then yesterday we got our first ever request for supporting MongoDB, and I expect we'll get a ton more of those types of things over the next few years.
Matt
On Thu, Dec 6, 2012 at 11:49 AM, Radoulov, Dimitre <cichomitiko_at_gmail.com>wrote:
> On 06/12/2012 17:33, Sandra Becker wrote:
> > I've never heard this before yesterday and
> > wonder how other companies are positioning themselves regarding the
> future
> > of their databases. Can anyone shed a little light on the subject or
> point
> > me to a good resource?
>
> Not expressing an opinion but just sharing a few facts that seem somehow
> related:
>
> - about 5 years ago we had only Oracle databases in our enterprise
> - about 3 years ago - mostly Oracle databases and a few MySQL databases
> - now the distribution Oracle/MySQL is about 50/50 - in fact, the
> number of MySQL databases is much higher,
> but the ratio Oracle/MySQL instances is 50/50 - and, a few days ago,
> we installed our first PostgrSQL production database :)
>
> Now in addition to the Oracle documentation, I'm reading the official
> MySQL and PostgreSQL documentation ...
>
>
> Regards
> Dimitre
>
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>
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>
-- http://www.freelists.org/webpage/oracle-lReceived on Thu Dec 06 2012 - 17:53:35 CET