Fotolog is the world's largest photo blogging social network, boasting more than 700,000 new photos per day and more than 3 billion page views a month. More than 11 million fotologgers communicate and connect through their photos on Fotolog. With the help of Solaris 10 and MySQL Enterprise, Fotolog has scaled to become a top 20 destination on the Internet according to Alexa.
Infobright announced today that Xerox has selected Infobright to provide an Analytic Data Warehousing solution for improved customer insight.
BrightHouse is an analytic data warehouse that takes advantage of the MySQL database server's pluggable storage engine architecture . Using BrightHouse, Xerox will have a solution that allows business intelligence analysts to quickly and easily analyze customer data to more rapidly react to changes in the market. BrightHouse has very low administrative and maintenance requirements, resulting in a very low IT overhead for the solution.
Fotolog is the world's largest photo blogging social network, boasting more than 700,000 new photos per day and more than 3 billion page views a month. More than 11 million fotologgers communicate and connect through their photos on Fotolog. With the help of Solaris 10 and MySQL Enterprise, Fotolog has scaled to become a top 20 destination on the Internet according to Alexa.
Infobright announced today that Xerox has selected Infobright to provide an Analytic Data Warehousing solution for improved customer insight.
BrightHouse is an analytic data warehouse that takes advantage of the MySQL database server's pluggable storage engine architecture . Using BrightHouse, Xerox will have a solution that allows business intelligence analysts to quickly and easily analyze customer data to more rapidly react to changes in the market. BrightHouse has very low administrative and maintenance requirements, resulting in a very low IT overhead for the solution.
MySQL Toolkit version numbers are based on Subversion revision number. This release is the first past the 1,000-commit milestone. It also marks several days of being in Sourceforge’s top 100 most active projects. It has been in the top 300 for a couple of months, and the top 1000 for, um, a long time. While I would hasten to say I’m not a popularity-contest-focused person, it’s rewarding to see that people think this project is important and useful.
I’m on the select board of elite people who were duped into reviewing proposals for the upcoming MySQL Conference and Expo 2008, and I’m here to tell you how to get your proposal accepted. Aside from bribing me with chocolate, that is. These are my opinions. Believe it or not, I have not been instructed how to evaluate proposals. And by the way, I have no authority to get your session accepted – I only get to say how good I think it is.
Work continues apace on High Performance MySQL, Second Edition (the link leads to the chapter outline). I’m working now on Chapter 6, Advanced SQL Functionality, and thought I’d solicit input on it. Are there things you’d like to see us cover? Do you have any favorite techniques you’d like to see us include? Feel free to leave feedback in the comments. The chapter is already significantly done, with 26 pages written, but the ink’s not on paper yet, so there’s still time to correct omissions!
As the opentaps
Open Source ERP + CRM community continues to grow, I will try
to publish a regular update to keep all our users, contributors,
and services providers up to date with our progress.
Recent Developments
The past few months have been a period of significant changes in
opentaps. By incorporating several new open source applications
into our core framework, we are now positioned to transform
opentaps from an ERP application to an enterprise-wide
application platform. The new opentaps 1.0 will offer a full
range of capabilities, including mobile connectivity and a choice
of open source business intelligence tools, on top of our core
ERP and CRM features.
Some of key developments include:
- Integration of the Funambol Data Synchronization via the …
So last week MySQL was on site at work for MySQL DBA
Certification prep. class (which was very awesome and highly
recommended, by the way) and one of the things that came up was
how much faster enumerated types would be over using JOINs, say
to store things like the categories of a blog not unlike this
one. Well, the issue had been bugging me so I thought I would
figure it out. This time around, I wanted to get my feet wet with
mysqlslap, since it basically does the same
thing as my SQLBuster, only better :)
What I did was basically run two tests. One was running my
original query to pull up a single blog post, which contained two
JOINs to de-normalize the categories and moods. The categories
and moods tables are very small - less than 20 records, but I do
have indexes setup …
This is a friendly reminder that we have opened our Call for Participation for the MySQL Users Conference 15-18 April 2008 in Santa Clara, California.
Yes, 15 April next year may seem far away. But 30 October this year isn’t. And that’s when the Call for Paper closes.
Some UC 2008 highlights:
- Conference theme is “Harnessing the Power of MySQL”
- We expect to bring over 1,500 open source and database users together
- Over 100 sessions, geared toward many skill levels (novice to expert)
Consider to present, especially if you belong to one or more of the below …
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