Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Firebase's first product was the Firebase Realtime Database, an API that synchronizes application data across iOS, Android, and Web devices, and stores it on Firebase's cloud. The product assists software developers in building real-time, collaborative applications.
Originally released as a feature in Google App Engine in 2008, [4] Cloud Datastore was announced as a standalone product in 2013 during Google I/O. [5] In 2018 at the Google Cloud Next conference, the second-generation Firestore database was opened to general availability, with a backward-compatibility mode. [6]
Google Cloud Firestore is the successor to Google Cloud Datastore and replaces GQL with a document-based query method that treats stored objects as collections of documents. Firestore was launched in October 2017. [12]
A document-oriented database is a specialized key-value store, which itself is another NoSQL database category. In a simple key-value store, the document content is opaque. A document-oriented database provides APIs or a query/update language that exposes the ability to query or update based on the internal structure in the document. This ...
Bigtable development began in 2004. [1] It is now used by a number of Google applications, such as Google Analytics, [2] web indexing, [3] MapReduce, which is often used for generating and modifying data stored in Bigtable, [4] Google Maps, [5] Google Books search, "My Search History", Google Earth, Blogger.com, Google Code hosting, YouTube, [6] and Gmail. [7]
A triplestore or RDF store is a purpose-built database for the storage and retrieval of triples [1] through semantic queries.A triple is a data entity composed of subject–predicate–object, like "Bob is 35" (i.e., Bob's age measured in years is 35) or "Bob knows Fred".
Brad Wolverton is a senior writer and Sandhya Kambhampati is a database reporter at The Chronicle of Higher Education. Design and art direction by Hilary Fung and Alissa Scheller, visual editors for HuffPost. Reporting contributions from Nicky Forster, data fellow for HuffPost, and Isaac Stein, reporting intern for The Chronicle.
The Firebird database engine and its modules are released under an open-source license, the Initial Developer's Public License (IDPL), a variant of the Mozilla Public License (MPL) version 1.1. It does not require the developer to open the products using Firebird or even custom-derivatives made from its source code, but if the developer chooses ...