Saturday, 13 June 2009 NOSQL debrief The relatively young but rapidly growing "nosql" community met last Thursday in San Francisco. The idea was to give attendees a solid introduction to how distributed, non relational databases work as well as an overview of the various projects out there. If I may say so myself we succeeded in doing both. Thanks to all the presenters for very interesting talks a
Read it now on the O’Reilly learning platform with a 10-day free trial. O’Reilly members get unlimited access to books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers. Three of CouchDB's creators show you how to use this document-oriented database as a standalone application framework or with high-volume, distributed applications. With its simple mod
I’ve recently been working on an implementation of cookie-based authentication for CouchDB. This is important for pure CouchDB applications (couchapps), where browsers communicate directly with CouchDB. Currently browsers can be authenticated using HTTP basic auth but the popup login box can be disruptive and confusing for users. Implementation The cookie part itself was pretty straightforward. Th
Ely Service now runs on CouchDB. Things just got a little simpler: no more Django plus PostgreSQL plus Nginx. Casual Lofa: the World's fastest furniture Ely Service is, as J. Chris Anderson put it, “just a very ordinary-looking garage Web site”. It's a simple Web site, which I originally developed using Django. It consists of six pages, one of which has a contact form for sending emails. So the re
The biggest response I got to Toast, my realtime CouchDB chat server was: "wtf why didn't you use XYZ technology?" The point of developing chat in CouchDB is not to show how CouchDB is an ideal persisted chat server (even if it is). The point is to show how CouchDB's "databasey" features, because they are implemented using HTTP, can be leveraged to make powerful end-user experiences, with just a m
The overall document-oriented approach of CouchDB and the free-form way of saving data are probably the things that appeal to most of us when we first read about this new database. Most of the people that were introduced to CouchDB so far quickly made the decision to use it in production despite the early beta’ish state of the project. We all hate normalization, we all want a faster and responsive
リリース、障害情報などのサービスのお知らせ
最新の人気エントリーの配信
処理を実行中です
j次のブックマーク
k前のブックマーク
lあとで読む
eコメント一覧を開く
oページを開く