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MarkLogic comes to developers



Alex Handy
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September 20, 2012 —  (Page 3 of 3)
“We certainly think that many NoSQL technologies are going to have a place because they support certain use cases very well, but we think a document-oriented database is going to have the broadest community and is of interest to the biggest companies.”

Because all of the NoSQL companies are pushing forward and adding features quickly, the table stakes for the NoSQL game have increased steadily over time. Things like cross-data center replication and automatic dynamic scalability are becoming standard features in enterprise-grade NoSQL offerings.

In fact, most of the major road maps for Cassandra, Couchbase, MarkLogic and MongoDB are overlapping. If one database has cross-data center replication, you can bet the other three are working on that same capability. Each of these NoSQLs has strengths and weaknesses, and as direct competitors, they also know the strengths and weaknesses of each other.

Jonathan Ellis, CTO and cofounder of Cassandra service and support company DataStax, said that Cassandra targets the high end of the NoSQL spectrum. As such, the graphical tools for administrating Cassandra are still evolving, while the command-line tools are already powerful and mature. “For Cassandra, we're happy with where we are on the core storage engine and transparent compression,” he said.



Related Search Term(s): MarkLogic, NoSQL

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