News

Oracle has responded by offering its own noSQL database, with mixed success. Oracle's flagship database is by far the most popular database out there, but MongoDB is by far the most popular noSQL.
Senior Analyst, Servers, Matt Kimball, dives in as Oracle announced the availability of the Oracle Database API for MongoDB. This service enables enterprise organizations to realize the benefits ...
That was the validation NoSQL document database provider MongoDB received in early February when Oracle Corp. announced availability of the Oracle Database API for MongoDB.
Oracle’s extended diatribe against the NoSQL crowd — including Cassandra, MongoDB, CouchDB, and Redis — sought to expose their limitations and sow some serious doubt over their open-source ...
DB-Engines' rankings show Oracle is the database most talked about by recruiters and developers, but open source databases posted gains ...
Although leading NoSQL players such as mongoDB have gained a strong clientele, their advantages in terms of architectural flexibility has made limited in-roads into large enterprises.
Upstart NoSQL software vendor MongoDB has snagged a key engineer from the ranks of Oracle, the company’s largest competitor in the database software market.
"MongoDB is a leader in the NoSQL Database market stemming from its open-source roots, with the highlight being its cloud offering coined MongoDB Atlas – which now comprises 71% of total revenue ...
In a NoSQL database like MongoDB, for example, a document (aka complex object) can be the equivalent of rows joined across multiple tables, and consistency is guaranteed within that object.
Oracle had better watch its back. There’s a new(ish) database player on the market that wants to eat its lunch; dinner, breakfast and dessert too, for that matter. Say hello to MongoDB.
Until recently, makers of noSQL databases said their tech didn’t really compete with Oracle’s because it fits different needs. “Traditional relational databases are not going to go away,” Dwight ...