On Fri, May 19, 2006 13:25, Thomas Hallgren wrote: > If that's really true, then let's create a bidirectional compatibility > layer as a joint > venture with people from the MySQL camp. Should be a win-win situation. I > somehow doubt that > is the case. Important yes. But "just as important"? No way.
I'm not too hopeful, for two reasons. First: MySQL is very, very different. I heard they just introduced a "create user" command like everybody else, but that's a drop in an ocean. I'm sure it's unintentional, but publishing a "quaint" SQL dialect amounts to a vendor-lock-in scheme--this time with the barn being locked before the cash cows have walked in. Second: management changes at MySQL seem to have favoured conventional business thinking over following the techs where no man has gone before. A year or two back we discussed porting libpqxx to MySQL so we'd have at least a strong, common C++ layer. Some of the technical people loved it, a provisional team was sketched out, and the idea was pitched to management. The argument: the more stable interfaces we share, the more confident corporate customers will feel adopting free databases. It didn't go anywhere. Reports I heard later amounted to "they don't see why they should spend the money." Jeroen ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 1: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate subscribe-nomail command to [EMAIL PROTECTED] so that your message can get through to the mailing list cleanly