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DB-Engines' rankings show Oracle is the database most talked about by recruiters and developers, but open source databases posted gains. Topics Spotlight: New Thinking about Cloud Computing; ...
For Max Schireson — the president of 10gen, the company behind the open source NoSQL database MongoDB — Oracle’s march into his territory is no surprise.
Originally published by Sramana Mitra on LinkedIn: Should Oracle Buy MongoDB? According to a Market Research Media report published earlier this year, the global NoSQL market is estimated to grow ...
They discussed the latest announcement, use cases for Oracle’s Autonomous Database, merits of both SQL and NoSQL in the enterprise, and future expansion of the converged database. SQL queries ...
Oracle (NYSE: ORCL) first introduced its relational database (the one that can be visualized in tables of rows and columns) in the late 1970s. While the Oracle database served user needs for ...
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.
MongoDB is often the first NoSQL database developers will try because it’s so easy to learn. Will Shulman, CEO of MongoLab (a MongoDB-as-a-service provider), ... A former Oracle DBA, ...
Alreading serving enterprise needs for OLTP/operational and business intelligence and reporting systems, the database space is expanding to a third critical realm, non-relational, NoSQL database ...
Ever since Oracle extended its self-driving database and aggressively priced it for JSON developers, we've been wondering when they would come out and meet MongoDB developers where they live.
That need prompted MongoDB (NASDAQ: MDB) to introduce Atlas, a non-relational database that can store unstructured data types. However, Oracle responded by introducing its own non-relational database.