It doesn't suport alot of differnt things....
it dosent have store procedures , dosent have a complete SQL command set...

I am using it becasue I am being forced to...



-----Original Message-----
From: Elizabeth Bogner [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, August 15, 2002 9:25 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: MySQL vs. Oracle (not speed)



A company I work with is in the process of upgrading its databases from
some
motheaten system to something current. My impression is that they
want to go with Oracle, and I'm not sure if this is based on anything
other than being impressed with the size and presumed quality support
of Oracle. I'd like to encourage them to at least seriously consider
using
MySQL instead.

I don't think that speed is a huge factor here; we do a lot of XML
publishing
and content management, but at most we'd have several gigabytes of
data and several dozen simultaneous users, so well within the
capabilities
of MySQL. I've looked at various things I could find, like the benchmarks
pages (probably not relevant) and the MySQL myths page, which was
somewhat helpful, but I couldn't find anything more along the lines of
"How to Convince my Management to go with MySQL." I don't even know
what to expect from them, but I'm imagining they'll say, "But MySQL
doesn't support sub-selects," to which I can reply, "But you can write
most of those as joins anyway, so it won't matter because the software
will all be written from scratch." Etc.

Are there pointers anyone can give me?

E. Bognewitz


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