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by Animats
221 days ago
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> the example I really wanted to use was people picking Go for their top-end, competitive-with-anything-in-the-market database. You mean they're writing their own database? Why? That's a huge job and available databases are pretty good. There are multiple open-source choices, all of which work. If they think they're going to compete with Oracle, they need to read the history of Oracle. |
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Of course, almost no one should attempt this. The number of people with the technical expertise to pull it off successfully is much, much smaller than the number of companies with workloads that would benefit from this.
It doesn't have to be an exotic workload. Sometimes the market is just full of weak implementations e.g. graph databases.