Re: postgre vs MySQL
От | Erik Jones |
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Тема | Re: postgre vs MySQL |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 1DB6DBD5-6AA8-4F20-9AEF-B349415F70BF@myemma.com обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: postgre vs MySQL (Ron Mayer <rm_pg@cheapcomplexdevices.com>) |
Ответы |
Re: postgre vs MySQL
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Список | pgsql-general |
On Mar 15, 2008, at 8:58 AM, Ron Mayer wrote: > Greg Smith wrote: >> On Fri, 14 Mar 2008, Andrej Ricnik-Bay wrote: >>> A silly question in this context: If we know of a company that >>> does use PostgreSQL but doesn't list it anywhere ... can we take >>> the liberty to publicise this somewhere anyway? > > I notice Oracle (and sleepycat before them) had a lot of fun > pointing out when Microsoft uses BDB. > > http://www.oracle.com/technology/oramag/oracle/07-jan/o17opensource.html > You'll find Oracle Berkeley DB "under the hood" in everything > from Motorola cell phones, Microsoft/Groove's collaboration suite > > and it seems unlikely Microsoft gave them their blessings. > >> Bad idea. There are companies who consider being listed as a user >> of a product a sort of recommendation of that technology, and >> accordingly > > Other reasons a company might get offended by this: > > * They might consider it a trade secret and a competitive advantage > over competitors; and internally enjoy giggling when they see > their competitors sign deals with expensive databases. > > * They might have a close business partnership with Microsoft > or Oracle that could be strained if they support other databases. > > I suspect my employer would not like it announced for both reasons. > >> they will get really annoyed...asked to be removed from the list of >> those using PostgreSQL. ... PostgreSQL inside, it's best not to >> publish the results unless you like to collect cease & desist >> letters. > > While I agree companies are likely to get annoyed - just like fast > food companies do when you say how much trans-fats their products > contain; I'm rather curious what such a cease&desist letter would say. Probably just a firm, but polite, request to quit it. I'd say that with a completely open piece of software like Postgres, i.e. where no commercial licensing is involved, the question is more ethical than legal. In fact, I can't think of a situation where "mind your own business" could be take more literally :) Erik Jones DBA | Emma® erik@myemma.com 800.595.4401 or 615.292.5888 615.292.0777 (fax) Emma helps organizations everywhere communicate & market in style. Visit us online at http://www.myemma.com
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