News
Amazon helped start the "NoSQL" movement. And now it's giving the cause another shot in the arm. NoSQL is a widespread effort to build a new kind of database for “unstructured” information ...
Amazon Web Services has launched DynamoDB, a NoSQL database that the e-commerce giant uses to crunch its big data, in a move that's likely to entice enterprises to try out alternatives to ...
Despite spawning many NoSQL offspring, Dynamo was never offered as a service to Amazon Web Services (AWS) customers. The technology was simply too complex to have wide spread adoption. Instead AWS ...
Amazon Web Services launched a new, fully managed NoSQL cloud database the cloud services giant said handles all of the database heavy lifting with rapid scalability.
In May of last year, Amazon quietly acquired Amiato, a startup that built a platform to extract unstructured data from NoSQL databases and migrate it to Redshift, creating structure so that it ...
CouchDB creator Damian Katz wasn't inspired by Google or Amazon or any other web giant. He was inspired by Lotus Notes, an online collaboration platform originally developed in the 1970s and 80s.
Amazon Web Services (AWS) delivers a new NoSQL database service known as DynamoDB that delivers fast and predictable performance with all the scalability you can ask for.
Amazon’s DynamoDB shook up the database market as one of the first cloud-based NoSQL products in the market, all hosted in AWS’s cloud.
Called DynamoDB, the service is a "NoSQL" database, with access based on key-value pairs, and is offered as a fully managed database service for Amazon Web Services customers.
Amazon Web Services (AWS) is stepping up its presence in the NoSQL database market, and the competition with MongoDB, by adding support for JSON documents to its already-popular DynamoDB service.
Amazon announced today DynamoDB, a fully managed cloud-based NoSQL database service that builds on the company’s SimpleDB service by delivering faster, more consistent database performance to ...
Buyers have plenty of choice in NoSQL databases, so how do you choose? Here are five questions that could help you narrow it down.
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results