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Azure Cosmos DB is a globally distributed, multi-model database service offered by Microsoft. It is designed to provide high availability, scalability, and low-latency access to data for modern applications.
Azure Data Lake service was released on November 16, 2016. It is based on COSMOS, [2] which is used to store and process data for applications such as Azure, AdCenter, Bing, MSN, Skype and Windows Live. COSMOS features a SQL-like query engine called SCOPE upon which U-SQL was built. [2]
Database SQL Document Graph Object License Transactions ArangoDB: No: Yes: Yes: No: Business Source License 1.1: Full ACID, pessimistic locking, configurable durability
Revelation – In 1984, Cosmos released a Pick-style database called Revelation, later Advanced Revelation, for DOS on the IBM PC. Advanced Revelation is now owned by Revelation Technologies, which publishes a GUI-enabled version called OpenInsight. jBASE – jBASE was released in 1991 by a small company of the same name in Hemel Hempstead ...
Cosmos DB is a NoSQL database service that implements a subset of the SQL SELECT statement on JSON documents. Azure Cache for Redis is a managed implementation of Redis . StorSimple manages storage tasks between on-premises devices and cloud storage.
Azure Web Apps was the name for a cloud computing based platform for hosting websites, created and operated by Microsoft.It is a platform as a service (PaaS) which allows publishing Web apps running on multiple frameworks and written in different programming languages (.NET, node.js, PHP, Python and Java), including Microsoft proprietary ones and 3rd party ones.
Conversely, many mainstream NoSQL databases, like Azure Cosmos DB and Amazon DynamoDB, utilize stateless, HTTP-based protocols that handle each request independently. This architecture often reduces the need for traditional connection pooling, though reusing established connections can still offer performance benefits in high-throughput ...
Azure Maps was first introduced in public preview mode under the name "Azure Location Based Services" in 2017, primarily as an enterprise solution. [4] The services was intended to add mapping and location-based functionality onto the existing Azure cloud services suite, seen as a critical part of Microsoft's broader Internet-of-Things (IoT) strategy.