Re: postgresql -- what's in a name? - Mailing list pgsql-general

From Tom Lane
Subject Re: postgresql -- what's in a name?
Date
Msg-id 2148.1013407823@sss.pgh.pa.us
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: postgresql -- what's in a name?  ("Dominic J. Eidson" <sauron@the-infinite.org>)
Responses Re: postgresql -- what's in a name?
where the name "postgresql" really originated
List pgsql-general
"Dominic J. Eidson" <sauron@the-infinite.org> writes:
> It started out as "Ingres" - a project at UCB. Then it was taken by
> Michael Stonebraker, who led a team that worked on "Postgres"
> ("post-" as in "after-"), and developed into that.

"Taken" isn't the right word here, since Prof. Stonebraker was the lead
on both projects.  Also, Postgres was not a revision of Ingres but a
complete new project with new goals and all-new code.  See
http://s2k-ftp.CS.Berkeley.EDU:8000/postgres/postgres-v4r2/postgres.faq
(which can be reached from the POSTGRES link in our "What is
PostgreSQL?" documentation entry)

Karel posted a good summary awhile back:
http://archives.postgresql.org/pgsql-hackers/2001-11/msg01255.php

> In 1995, it became
> Postgres95 - and the final name change came with the addition of SQL
> capabillities, at which point it became "PostgreSQL", the name it still
> has.

Postgres95 was SQL, if I'm not mistaken.

            regards, tom lane

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