When will SQL die?
its literally a ancient tech like serial port
Because its ancient but still works fantastically
>>57820506
When the managers stop demanding datas to be saved and later makes graphs out of them.
So most likely never.
But everytime I need bulk insert I wonder why it still isn't in the standard yet?
>>57820506
What's wrong with SQL?
>>57820506
It's more like it's literally an ancient tech like the operating system or electricity. Some things aren't going to be replaced, just iterated upon.
Most persistent data is relational. So SQL will never go away. NoSQL is a meme and will fade over time.
When will TCP/UDP die?
its literally a ancient tech like serial port
Why should it die? I have made a living developing stuff in it for about a decade. Nothing has replaced it and nothing will or can. Sql will outlast even C.
Wasn't there someone who just piped three unix commands together and got magnitudes better perfomance on his laptop than some multi-server-BigData-NoSQL-meme-app
There's nothing wrong with SQL.
It'd be cool if the industry could decide on a standard and not have 50 slightly different versions of SQL, or if they'd get rid of tons of useless cruft that comes with the DB servers that no one uses.
But there is absolutely nothing wrong with SQL
>>57823287
NoSQL will live on under an abstraction layer in a lot of enterprise relational data storage. NoSQL makes it much easier to partition data sets for scale out across multiple physical servers.
>>57820506
>whats a database?
>>57823523
Yeah, I can see NoSQL being used as part of a database application for things like caching or key/value storage.
member when they said Adobe Flash player will never die?
When will modern monitors die and vector monitors take over because they are seriously bitchin' rad!?
>>57820506
It already has. Use MongoDB. It will work out beautifully for you.
t. consultant
>>57823330
You don't even need the comparison, we still use serial ports (just less RS232) because they work
>>57823287
>Most persistent data is relational. So SQL will never go away.
Being relational is an essential property of data but you can replace SQL with a better query language (e.g., not text-based).