Re: Sixth Draft - Mailing list pgsql-advocacy
From | Richard Huxton |
---|---|
Subject | Re: Sixth Draft |
Date | |
Msg-id | 4136000B.4030800@archonet.com Whole thread Raw |
In response to | Sixth Draft (<josh@bitbuckets.com>) |
Responses |
Re: Sixth Draft
|
List | pgsql-advocacy |
josh@bitbuckets.com wrote: > The following draft considers everyone's comments. I think the paragraph > about history (moved to the end) needs more stuff. > > Thanks, > --J Three points near the top and one near the bottom... > August 24, 2004 - The PostgreSQL Global Development group today announced > the availability of the 8.0 version of the PostgreSQL Object-Relational > Database Management System, the most advanced open source database in the > world today. With this new release, professional users have an "have a world-class" ^^^^ > world-class, scalable, open source database solution that does not > sacrifice many of the conveniences provided by commercial products. Remove the negative "does not"? Perhaps "that matches many of the conveniences..." > PostgreSQL 8.0 contains many new features that make the database a strong > contender against the likes of Oracle and DB2. Many companies, who view Perhaps "a stronger contender". Perhaps "arguably the strongest contender" or "arguably the strongest competitor". > PostgreSQL as a strategic part of their overall I.T. plan, have sponsored > development of the new features, which include: > > Native Windows Support: PostgreSQL now works natively with Windows > systems and does not need an emulation layer. This provides dramatically > improved performance over previous versions, and offers a compelling > alternative to Microsoft SQL Server for independent software vendors, > corporate users, and individual Windows developers. > > Savepoints: Savepoints allow specific parts of a database transaction to > be aborted without affecting the whole transaction. This feature, funded > by Fujitsu, is valuable for application developers who require error > recovery within complex transactions. > > Point In Time Recovery: PITR provides the ability to recover data to the > point of failure or to any time in the past. > > Tablespaces: This feature, also funded by Fujitsu, allows the database > administrator to choose which filesystems are used for schemas, tables, > and indexes. This allows the administrator to place whole databases on > separate disks to improve performance. > > Improved Memory and I/O usage: With this release of PostgreSQL, disk > input/output subsystems have been improved to use shared buffers more > effectively, yielding significant increases in speed and performance. > > There are also several new external components which complement the core > PostgreSQL database engine: > > - Slony-I is a a "master-slave" replication system with cascading and > failover capabilities funded by Internet domain registry Afilias. Perhaps one more sentence on Slony: "It even lets you replicate between different versions of PostgreSQL". > - PostgreSQL added to its roster of stored procedure languages with > PL/PerlNG and PL/PHP which were sponsored by consultancy Command Prompt, > Inc. as well as PL/Java and the .Net provider Npgsql. > > Version 8 is the collective work of hundreds of developers, building on > almost twenty years of development dating back to the University of > California at Berkeley. > > PostgreSQL is licensed under a BSD-style license, which due to its lack of > licensing fees allows corporate and individual users more flexibility than > the competition. The PostgreSQL database can be downloaded freely at > http://www.postgresql.org. -- Richard Huxton Archonet Ltd
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