tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-902486075140485537.post7877123044926750654..comments2023-09-15T16:47:49.946+01:00Comments on Piotr Rodak:<br> if datepart(dw, getdate()) in (6, 7) use pubs;: With head in the cloudsPiotr Rodakhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08418009093976236989noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-902486075140485537.post-24938684987208041742010-07-28T23:20:19.226+01:002010-07-28T23:20:19.226+01:00Well I never that it is bad or good :). I just wan...Well I never that it is bad or good :). I just wanted to point out that there is no magic, no groundbreaking technology in the clouds.<br /><br />I see that you reactivated your blog - nice :)Piotr Rodakhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08418009093976236989noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-902486075140485537.post-77099212606367877152010-07-27T12:39:34.349+01:002010-07-27T12:39:34.349+01:00There are different replication strategies thus in...There are different replication strategies thus in most cases the local node and replicas are treated differently. What's wrong with it? You might get inconsistent writes? Well, that's one of the tradeoffs and side effect of CAP theorem.Pawel Pabichhttp://www.pabich.eu/blognoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-902486075140485537.post-1854824464939564412010-07-23T20:21:40.589+01:002010-07-23T20:21:40.589+01:00Oh yes, but asynchronous replication means that yo...Oh yes, but asynchronous replication means that you don't wait for the physical write to send the data. Besides, I would find it awkward if the node where the change originated would be treated in a different way than nodes which are targets of replication.Piotr Rodakhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08418009093976236989noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-902486075140485537.post-76628209072318839062010-07-22T10:37:03.040+01:002010-07-22T10:37:03.040+01:00Quite a few NoSQL databases use JSON(open standard...Quite a few NoSQL databases use JSON(open standard) which is actually very easy to work with.<br />I can't really believe that NoSQL databases replicate data before it gets persisted locally. The replication is an asyn process and can be done once data is written locally. That's where the eventual consistency comes from I believe.Pawel Pabichhttp://www.pabich.eu/blognoreply@blogger.com