Re: How hard would a "no global server" version be? - Mailing list pgsql-hackers

From Ross J. Reedstrom
Subject Re: How hard would a "no global server" version be?
Date
Msg-id 20000829113020.B10972@rice.edu
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: How hard would a "no global server" version be?  (Rob Browning <rlb@cs.utexas.edu>)
List pgsql-hackers
On Tue, Aug 29, 2000 at 12:25:08AM -0500, Rob Browning wrote:
> Thomas Lockhart <lockhart@alumni.caltech.edu> writes:
> 
> > Not specifically. Postgres is a full-up database, and afaik there isn't
> > a contingent of our developer community which is sufficiently interested
> > to pursue "mini" configurations. But...
> 
> Well perhaps I'll become that contingent :>
> 

Another use for such a mini config would be the PDA market. IBM's got
DB2 for the Palm, if I remember correctly. That's a little _too_ small a
target, I think, but the new crop of PocketPC devices have enough memory
and horsepower to be useful with a real database.

> > Of course we'd prefer that people realize that everything in the
> > world would be better if they just had a Postgres server running
> > 24x7 ;)

Naw, that'd suck all the joules out of my battery!

> No doubt, but perhaps the "mini" configuration might be an insidious
> method of initiating the corruption leading to the "one true way".

With the PDA, we'd need a conduit to go back and forth to the desktop,
which runs the 24x7 full server. Corruption by another path...

Ross
-- 
Ross J. Reedstrom, Ph.D., <reedstrm@rice.edu> 
NSBRI Research Scientist/Programmer
Computer and Information Technology Institute
Rice University, 6100 S. Main St.,  Houston, TX 77005


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