Thread: PostgreSQL book market up 84%
At least, according to Tim O'Reilly, who should know: http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2006/04/state_of_the_computer_book_mar_3.html Good times, Tom
quote: "A surprise to many may be the strong growth of PostgreSQL, up 84% over a year ago. We've also been hearing some signs of growth in the Postgres market from our "alpha geek" radar, with reasons given including better support for geo data, and better handling of very large data sets. New companies like Greenplum and EnterpriseDB have also brought a little focus to this market. We're updating our PostgreSQL book, and watching this market closely." pgsql 8.0 , windows port. That should explain a bit these figures, tho. g.- On 4/21/06, Tom Copeland <tom@infoether.com> wrote: > At least, according to Tim O'Reilly, who should know: > > http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2006/04/state_of_the_computer_book_mar_3.html > > Good times, > > Tom > > > > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- > TIP 9: In versions below 8.0, the planner will ignore your desire to > choose an index scan if your joining column's datatypes do not > match > -- Guido Barosio ----------------------- http://www.globant.com guido.barosio@globant.com
On Fri, Apr 21, 2006 at 09:53:39PM +0100, Guido Barosio wrote: > quote: "A surprise to many may be the strong growth of PostgreSQL, up > 84% over a year ago. We've also been hearing some signs of growth in > the Postgres market from our "alpha geek" radar, with reasons given > including better support for geo data, and better handling of very > large data sets. New companies like Greenplum and EnterpriseDB have > also brought a little focus to this market. We're updating our > PostgreSQL book, and watching this market closely." > > pgsql 8.0 , windows port. That should explain a bit these figures, tho. Actually, I think it's more than just that. For example, my understanding is that even though it's database agnostic, a lot of Rails users are going with PostgreSQL. I think a lot of the silliness in MySQL is finally coming back to haunt them, as people are preferring a database that "just does the right thing". -- Jim C. Nasby, Sr. Engineering Consultant jnasby@pervasive.com Pervasive Software http://pervasive.com work: 512-231-6117 vcard: http://jim.nasby.net/pervasive.vcf cell: 512-569-9461
On Fri, 2006-04-21 at 16:02 -0500, Jim C. Nasby wrote: > On Fri, Apr 21, 2006 at 09:53:39PM +0100, Guido Barosio wrote: > > quote: "A surprise to many may be the strong growth of PostgreSQL, up > > 84% over a year ago. We've also been hearing some signs of growth in > > the Postgres market from our "alpha geek" radar, with reasons given > > including better support for geo data, and better handling of very > > large data sets. New companies like Greenplum and EnterpriseDB have > > also brought a little focus to this market. We're updating our > > PostgreSQL book, and watching this market closely." > > > > pgsql 8.0 , windows port. That should explain a bit these figures, tho. > > Actually, I think it's more than just that. For example, my > understanding is that even though it's database agnostic, a lot of Rails > users are going with PostgreSQL. Right on. We're running http://getindi.com/ on Rails + PostgreSQL, and I make a point of occasionally scanning the Rails mailing list for folks having problems with getting Rails working with PostgreSQL. A couple of times it's been that they're spelling the database adaptor as "postgres" vs "postgresql" :-) Yours, Tom
Guido, On 4/21/06 1:53 PM, "Guido Barosio" <gbarosio@gmail.com> wrote: > quote: "A surprise to many may be the strong growth of PostgreSQL, up > 84% over a year ago. We've also been hearing some signs of growth in > the Postgres market from our "alpha geek" radar, with reasons given > including better support for geo data, and better handling of very > large data sets. New companies like Greenplum and EnterpriseDB have > also brought a little focus to this market. We're updating our > PostgreSQL book, and watching this market closely." "Bizgres MPP's great performance and ability to scale to large data volumes is impressive and necessary as we acquire and analyze large and growing data sets. With Bizgres MPP, processes that used to take 10 hours now run in under 7 minutes." - Roger Magoulas, O'Reilly Media O'Reilly rocks! - Luke
Indeed, and so does Bizgres. Postgresql rocks since it was born, or more o less. Bizgres, either. O'Reilly, kings The fact is that it is ".. 84% over a year ago." A year ago, there was a major release, spreading the market, with a new port too. It was a massive hit I believe. Would like to see how many of these books are post 8.0. BTW, where is greenplum based, received a few calls after downloading the stuff, but they allways forget to mention the country code for a callback, while leaving voice messages :) g.- On 4/21/06, Luke Lonergan <llonergan@greenplum.com> wrote: > Guido, > > On 4/21/06 1:53 PM, "Guido Barosio" <gbarosio@gmail.com> wrote: > > > quote: "A surprise to many may be the strong growth of PostgreSQL, up > > 84% over a year ago. We've also been hearing some signs of growth in > > the Postgres market from our "alpha geek" radar, with reasons given > > including better support for geo data, and better handling of very > > large data sets. New companies like Greenplum and EnterpriseDB have > > also brought a little focus to this market. We're updating our > > PostgreSQL book, and watching this market closely." > > "Bizgres MPP's great performance and ability to scale to large data volumes > is impressive and necessary as we acquire and analyze large and growing data > sets. With Bizgres MPP, processes that used to take 10 hours now run in > under 7 minutes." - Roger Magoulas, O'Reilly Media > > O'Reilly rocks! > > - Luke > > > > -- Guido Barosio ----------------------- http://www.globant.com guido.barosio@globant.com
Guido, On 4/21/06 2:31 PM, "Guido Barosio" <gbarosio@gmail.com> wrote: > A year ago, there was a major release, spreading the market, with a > new port too. It was a massive hit I believe. Would like to see how > many of these books are post 8.0. Yup! 8.1 is a real turning point. > BTW, where is greenplum based, received a few calls after downloading > the stuff, but they allways forget to mention the country code for a > callback, while leaving voice messages :) Hmm - we're in the US, in San Mateo, CA. Will remind our folk about that. - Luke
On Friday 21 April 2006 17:31, Guido Barosio wrote: > A year ago, there was a major release, spreading the market, with a > new port too. It was a massive hit I believe. Would like to see how > many of these books are post 8.0. > From the book folks I have talked with, the 8.0 release was critical, because it open up postgresql to the casual windows developer, which expanded the market large enough to make postgresql books interesting to them. For the curious, the timeline goes something like this (keep in mind though that all of these books started at least 3-6 months ahead of thier publication date): 2005-01-19 8.0 released 2005-04-06 Beginning Databases w/ PostgreSQL (2nd Edition) 2005-07-26 PostgreSQL (2nd Edition) 2005-11-08 8.1 released 2006-02-27 Begining PHP and PostgreSQL 8 Korrys book is currently the best seller on this list, though I am kind of partial to that last one :-) -- Robert Treat Build A Brighter Lamp :: Linux Apache {middleware} PostgreSQL