It's still a proof of concept, but we actually use it in a production-like setup and my team continues to add features.

On 30/09/15 03:32, Marko Rodriguez wrote:
Hi Dylan,

Michael Pollmeier (of Gremlin-Scala fame) has OrientDB working with TinkerPop3.
        https://github.com/mpollmeier/orientdb-gremlin (and I just realized its a 
"proof of concept" -- dah. Sorry for the confusion)

I know Luca (OrientDB  lead) wants to transition to TinkerPop3, but can't just "cut 
the cord" so fast given its customers. Perhaps Luca can share more on that?

Finally, I totally forgot to mention all the client libraries that have been developed by 
the wider ecosystem that are TinkerPop3 enabled. Check out the homepage under 
"Libraries."
        http://tinkerpop.incubator.apache.org/
Insane….

Thanks Dylan,
Marko.

http://markorodriguez.com

On Sep 29, 2015, at 8:24 AM, Dylan Millikin <[email protected]> wrote:

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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