The Data Day, Two days: February 15/18 2013

Redshift goes GA. Pivotal’s Google in a box. And more.

And that’s the data day, today.

The Data Day, Two days: February 13/14 2013

TempoDB’s timely DBaaS for the Internet of Things. ScaleBase 2.0. And more

And that’s the data day, today.

The Data Day, Two days: February 7/8 2013

Teradata results. Funding for DataXu. The chemistry of data. And more.

And that’s the data day, today.

Cloud databases, or database on the cloud?

As 2012 came to a close I tweeted

NuoDB has today kicked off that debate with the launch of its Cloud Data Management System and 12 rules for a 21st century cloud database.

NuoDB’s 12 rules appear pretty sound to me – in fact you could argue they are somewhat obvious. This is actually to NuoDB’s credit in my opinion, in that they haven’t simply listed 12 differentiating aspects of their product, but 12 broader requirements.

Either way, I believe that this is the right time to be debating what constitutes a “cloud database”. Database on the cloud are nothing new, but these are existing relational database products configured to run on the cloud.

In other words, they are databases on the cloud, not databases of the cloud. There is a significant difference between spinning up a relational database in a VMI on the cloud versus deploying a database designed to take advantage of, enable, and be part of, the cloud.

To me, a true cloud database would be one designed to take advantage of and enable elastic, distributed architecture. NuoDB is one of those, but it won’t be the only one. Many NoSQL databases could also make a claim, albeit not for SQL and ACID workloads.

This isn’t a matter of SQL versus NoSQL, however. We’ve seen companies building their own next-generation database platforms deploying NoSQL and SQL technologies alongside each other for different workload and consistency requirements. Where the SQL layer falls down is the inability of existing relational databases to support elastic, geographically distributed cloud environments.

NuoDB believes it has a solution to that. So too do others including GenieDB, Translattice and VMware. Meanwhile Google’s F1 and Spanner projects have legitimized the concept of the globally-distributed SQL database.

Either way, the era of the relational cloud database – rather than the relational database on the cloud – has begun.

The Data Day, Two days: December 18/19 2012

GenieDB, Qubole, EdgeSpring, CouchDB, and more

And that’s the Data Day, today.

The Data Day, Two days: December 14/17 2012

MariaDB Foundation, VMware-Cetas, MemCachier. And more

And that’s the Data Day, today.

The Data Day, Two days: December 4/5 2012

EMC/VMware make Pivotal move. Funding for ClearStory. And more

And that’s the Data Day, today.

The Data Day, Two days: October 31/November 1 2012

IBM refreshes analytics portfolio. Datameer bags Dell. And more.

And that’s the Data Day, today.

The Data Day, Two days: October 29/30 2012

Pentaho raises $23m. Exploring CAP Theorem. And more.

And that’s the Data Day, today.

The Data Day, Two days: August 9/10 2012

HP’s Autonomy problem. Excel 2013. And more.

And that’s the Data Day, today.