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This article is a list of column-oriented database management system software. Free and open-source software Database name Language implemented in Notes Apache Doris ...
Multidisciplinary science Scientific journal database – the IC Journal Master List – contains currently over 2,500 journals from all over the world, including 700 journals from Poland. The journals registered in this database underwent rigorous, multidimensional parameterization, proving high quality.
MonetDB is an open-source column-oriented relational database management system (RDBMS) originally developed at the Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica (CWI) in the Netherlands.It is designed to provide high performance on complex queries against large databases, such as combining tables with hundreds of columns and millions of rows.
SAP HANA, short for 'High Performance Analytic Appliance' is an in-memory, column-oriented, relational database management system written in C, C++: solidDB: Unicom Global 1992 Proprietary Relational with standard SQL support. ODBC and JDBC interfaces. Includes in-memory and on-disk tables in the same engine. Supports high availability. SQL CE
The choice of data orientation is a trade-off and an architectural decision in databases, query engines, and numerical simulations. [1] As a result of these tradeoffs, row-oriented formats are more commonly used in Online transaction processing (OLTP) and column-oriented formats are more commonly used in Online analytical processing (OLAP). [2]
C-Store is a database management system (DBMS) based on a column-oriented DBMS developed by a team at Brown University, Brandeis University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the University of Massachusetts Boston including Michael Stonebraker, Stanley Zdonik, and Samuel Madden.
Stonebraker claims that arrays are 100 times faster in SciDB than in a relational DBMS on a class of problems. [2] It is swapping rows and columns for mathematical arrays that put fewer restrictions on the data and can work in any number of dimensions unlike the conventionally widely used relational database management system model, in which each relation supports only one dimension of records.
Daniel Abadi is the Darnell-Kanal Professor of Computer Science at University of Maryland, College Park. [2] His primary area of research is database systems, with contributions to stream databases, distributed databases, graph databases, and column-store databases. [3]