This is all very inspiring! Looking forward to the future.

Quick question regarding OrientDB, I see them in the list but is there
current support or are they still working on it ? (as has been discussed in
some other threads)

On Tue, Sep 29, 2015 at 3:59 PM, Marko Rodriguez <[email protected]>
wrote:

> Hello,
>
> I was typing away for the October2015 Podling status update and Stephen
> ping'd me and was like "TinkerPop doesn't have to do one this month." I had
> written up a nice report so I decided to share the contents with everyone
> as I think what we have done (and are doing) is quite impressive.
>
> ------------
>
> TinkerPop's adoption is growing. Nearly every popular graph system vendor
> is "TinkerPop enabled." Interestingly enough, even RDF graph systems
> (historically in another area of graph computing) are starting to provide
> TinkerPop connectivity. I had breakfast with Kendall Clark (in Santa Fe of
> all places) on Sunday and he was talking about Stardog's TP3 integration
> and it is impressive what they are doing with TinkerPop for Stardog4 (being
> released this week). I will be helping them on a blog post about
> Stardog4+TinkerPop3.
>
>         * Neo4j
>         * OrientDB
>         * Stardog (RDF)
>         * Titan
>         * Blazegraph (RDF)
>         * IBM BlueMix Graph
>         * Sqlg
>         * Apache Spark
>         * Apache Giraph
>         * Apache Hadoop
>
> Furthermore, there are many graph systems that are still
> TinkerPop2-enabled in the process of migrating to TinkerPop3.
>
> Amazon (the providers of DynamoDB) just announced Titan integration for
> DynamoDB and that supports TinkerPop2. With Titan 1.0 just released, we
> will see Amazon supporting TinkerPop3. As a cloud service provider that
> enables a "flip of the switch" to get a DynamoDB cluster up and running,
> there will be lots of Tinker-and-Popping on AWS.
>
> http://www.allthingsdistributed.com/2015/08/titan-graphdb-integration-in-dynamodb.html
>
> https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/new-store-and-process-graph-data-using-the-dynamodb-storage-backend-for-titan/
>
> DataStax (the commercial providers of Apache Cassandra) just announced
> that they will be providing a graph system called DSEGraph whose sole
> interface will be TinkerPop3. They are committed to Apache TinkerPop and
> are banking on it for the graph aspect of their business.
>
> http://www.slideshare.net/kromerm/datastax-cassandra-summit-2015-the-datastax-vision-for-a-multimodel-data-platform/8
>
> http://www.zdnet.com/article/microsoft-and-datastax-tie-up-cassandra-on-azure-deal-as-new-titan-graph-database-rolls-out/
>
> With the recent publication of two articles on the "Gremlin virtual
> machine" we hope to see a growth in the number of languages that compile to
> Gremlin.
>
> http://www.datastax.com/dev/blog/the-benefits-of-the-gremlin-graph-traversal-machine
>         http://arxiv.org/abs/1508.03843
> Right now, there exists SPARQL-Gremlin (proof-of-concept) which really
> helps to blur the distinction between the RDF and Property Graph worlds,
> thus expanding TinkerPop into another area of developers, consumers,
> promoters, and the like.
>         https://github.com/dkuppitz/sparql-gremlin
> When I was at Cassandra Summit last week, I spoke with Ted Wilmes who used
> Apache Calcite to compile SQL to TinkerPop2. He has some initial plans to
> use Apache Calcite to compiled SQL to Gremlin3 and thus, we may be opening
> the doors to the entire SQL world to use graph technology for both OLTP and
> OLAP graph processing. That could be huge.
>
> http://www.slideshare.net/twilmes/modeling-the-iot-with-titandb-and-cassandra
> I've stated that I would like to see SPARQL-Gremlin or SQL-Gremlin
> ultimately as a 3rd reference language implementation merged into
> TinkerPop3. As such, I'm keeping a close eye on both projects to see how
> they evolve and see where we can help take them.
>
> There have been 3 TinkerPop3-focused conference presentations recently:
>         1. NoSQL Now:
> http://www.slideshare.net/slidarko/the-gremlin-traversal-language
>         2. Cassandra Summit:
> http://www.slideshare.net/StephenMallette/tinkerpopfinal
>         3. Keynote at ACM Database Programming Languages:
> http://2015.splashcon.org/event/dbpl2015-dbpl-keynote-gremlin-a-stream-based-functional-language-for-oltp-and-olap-graph-computing
>
> Look at #3 above. Gremlin is the keynote at an ACM conference. This means
> that the academic community is realizing the benefits of TinkerPop not only
> from a "we can build stuff"-perspective (as we get in industry) but from a
> "that is a theoretically trippy concept"-perspective (as we get in
> academia). I have a new article I am working on for an upcoming conference
> that will hopefully get us tapped into another space of academics (beyond
> "just graphs."). The ideas in the upcoming article will be presented at
> GraphDay (January of 2016). I plan to demonstrate what I believe to be the
> craziest concept to hit the graph space yet.
>         http://graphday.com/
> It will fry brains…be there or be normal.
>
> And that, my fellow TinkerPoppers, is my interpretation of the major
> accomplishments of our work here at Apache TinkerPop.
>         http://www.datastax.com/dev/blog/tales-from-the-tinkerpop
>
> The future looks bright for TinkerPop with 3.0.2 and 3.1.0 releases coming
> over the remainder of this year.
>
> Take care,
> Marko.
>
> http://markorodriguez.com
>
>

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