Is this SQL databases or No-SQL?
Is this SQL databases or No-SQL?
Posted Mar 11, 2014 15:17 UTC (Tue) by Wol (subscriber, #4433)In reply to: Is this SQL databases or No-SQL? by mathstuf
Parent article: A discussion between database and kernel developers
Do you remember IBM buying Informix? When they bought it, U2 (a couple of Pick database implementations) came along for the ride. The whole lot was merged into the DB2 division. Obviously, I wasn't involved but I gather a whole lot of envious rivalries fired up inside the DB2 division as a result - the U2 bit was generating *double* *figure* year-on-year organic growth. So IBM sold it on to a company called Rocket Software. And when they sold it, it amounted to HALF of the entire DB2 division! So, in this one Pick company we're talking about it being the *same* size as IBM's database division.
Then there are a fair few other companies in that space too. And to give you a couple of big customers, the UK National Police people are a major user. I think a lot of your 911 services are users. A large chunk of the travel industry ... etc etc.
Something I'm well aware of, however, is that the big players seem woeful at supporting end users. I started out using Pr1me Information, and they supported end users very well. But I don't think the rest of the industry ever did, and when Pr1me went under about 1990 we started having real problems getting support - not because the companies didn't want to help us, but because they were geared up to selling to vars and didn't know HOW to help.
So the reason you probably don't see much Pick out there, is because it's sold as a package and you don't know what the underlying database actually is.
(As an aside, talking about speed, I said that ram isn't important ... I have personally experienced a 32-user 32MB system, SWAPPING LIKE MAD, and still providing adequate response times to users!!! It really is something to watch a Pick database provide decent service while struggling with inadequate capacity :-)
Cheers,
Wol
