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Replay of Ep 40 - The Birth of NoSQL and DynamoDb – Part 2

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Manage episode 256997642 series 2155284
Content provided by Jon Christensen. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Jon Christensen or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Show Details

Jon Christensen and Rich Staats learn about Chris Hickman’s first venture-backed startup (circa 1998) and its goal to build a database for Internet-scale applications. His story highlights what software is all about – history repeating itself because technology/software is meant to solve problems via new tools, techniques, and bigger challenges at bigger scales.

Some of the highlights of the show include:

  • Why Chris left Microsoft and how much it cost him; yet, he has no regrets
  • Chris’s concept addressed how to build a scalable database layer; how to partition, chart, and cluster; and how to make it highly available and a completely scale-out architecture
  • Chris couldn’t use the code he had created for it while at Microsoft; but from that, he learned what he wouldn’t do again
  • Chris let the file system be the database at Microsoft, and the project was named, Internet File Store (IFS); it used backend code and was similar to S3
  • Chris named his startup Viathan; had to do copyright, trademark, and domain name searches
  • Data for the Microsoft project could be stored in files/XML documents; Viathan took a different approach and used relational databases instead of a file system
  • Companies experienced problems at the beginning of the Internet; rest of ecosystem wasn’t developed and there weren’t enough people needing Internet solutions yet
  • Viathan went through several iterations that led to patents being issued and being considered as Prior art
  • Viathan’s technology couldn’t just be plugged in and turned on, applications had to be modified – a tough sell
  • Chris did groundbreaking work for what would become DynamoDB

Links and Resources

AWS

DynamoDB

AWS re:Invent 2018 – Keynote with Werner Vogels

re:Invent

DeepRacer

JSON

Moby Dick

MongoDB Acid Compliance

Prior Art

Kelsus

Secret Stache Media

  continue reading

160 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 256997642 series 2155284
Content provided by Jon Christensen. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Jon Christensen or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Show Details

Jon Christensen and Rich Staats learn about Chris Hickman’s first venture-backed startup (circa 1998) and its goal to build a database for Internet-scale applications. His story highlights what software is all about – history repeating itself because technology/software is meant to solve problems via new tools, techniques, and bigger challenges at bigger scales.

Some of the highlights of the show include:

  • Why Chris left Microsoft and how much it cost him; yet, he has no regrets
  • Chris’s concept addressed how to build a scalable database layer; how to partition, chart, and cluster; and how to make it highly available and a completely scale-out architecture
  • Chris couldn’t use the code he had created for it while at Microsoft; but from that, he learned what he wouldn’t do again
  • Chris let the file system be the database at Microsoft, and the project was named, Internet File Store (IFS); it used backend code and was similar to S3
  • Chris named his startup Viathan; had to do copyright, trademark, and domain name searches
  • Data for the Microsoft project could be stored in files/XML documents; Viathan took a different approach and used relational databases instead of a file system
  • Companies experienced problems at the beginning of the Internet; rest of ecosystem wasn’t developed and there weren’t enough people needing Internet solutions yet
  • Viathan went through several iterations that led to patents being issued and being considered as Prior art
  • Viathan’s technology couldn’t just be plugged in and turned on, applications had to be modified – a tough sell
  • Chris did groundbreaking work for what would become DynamoDB

Links and Resources

AWS

DynamoDB

AWS re:Invent 2018 – Keynote with Werner Vogels

re:Invent

DeepRacer

JSON

Moby Dick

MongoDB Acid Compliance

Prior Art

Kelsus

Secret Stache Media

  continue reading

160 episodes

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