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by stalller
3064 days ago
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Yes, they have. kdb+ has been the standard bearer within finance for more real-time trading applications. Still, q as a query language tends to marginalize more of the organization from having access to the data. TimescaleDB offers full-SQL at scale, opening the database up to more people. It's used to power longer-term trading platforms (for e.g., commodities trading) and interactive analytical dashboards (for e.g., research analysts). We also see applications in compliance and risk management. And yes, TimescaleDB is open-source. So we see TimescaleDB as complementary to kdb+, which has been around for much longer as a proprietary system, is certainly full-featured and powerful, but is used more in real-time trading applications. |
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