How do you guys keep track of people / resources.
I'm actually asking for strategy to keep note, or how you classify stuff. And what you write down.
If you know a little bit of computer science, I'm thinking of creating a JSON library with some good keywords, just because I've used this format before.
Better idea?
>>1987984
JSON is your best bet for storing data temporarily. MySQL if you want permanent. I only say JSON, cause' it's universally accepted by pretty much every language.
>>1987984
Why not just use a free open source address book?
You should not be building this kind of crap yourself for other reasons than as a hobby.
If you do proceed I would recommend Apache Cassandra as your DB (it can store JSON!), paired with ElasticSearch for your search engine. This combo will make for some awsome horizontal scaling. Make sure you put it in the cloud and buy plenty of nodes and storage.
>>1988001
Interesting you make these statements without any data or factual information to rebound the doubt.
> depends on how you will query it
No. You can query JSON all day, 24/7, and even on holidays. It's just retarded and unprofessional. JSON is mostly used for dynamic information.
> how much data you will have
JSON has a RECOMMENDED limit of 40 MB, as that is as much MOST client browsers can handle. If you have a 128 GB RAM 32 core computer, running puppy linux, I'm sure your limit can be much larger.
Sad.
>>1988018
kek
Simple CSV textfiles should be sufficient for anything you want, you can easily edit a textfile and most data analysis applications can handle CSV since it's so easy to read.
If you want redundancy & error correction just make backups .