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Kristina Chodorow is a core contributor to MongoDB. She has written several O'Reilly books (MongoDB: The Definitive Guide, Scaling MongoDB, and 50 Tips and Tricks for MongoDB Developers) and has given talks at conferences around the world, including OSCON, FOSDEM, Latinoware, TEK·X, and YAPC. Her Twitter handle is @kchodorow. Kristina is a DZone MVB and is not an employee of DZone and has posted 19 posts at DZone. You can read more from them at their website. View Full User Profile

Trends in NoSQL Interest According to Google Analytics

02.09.2012
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About a year ago, Mike Dirolf drew an enormous circle covering a sheet of paper. “Here are the people who use databases,” he said, “and here are the people who have even heard of NoSQL,” and he drew a circle this big: ° .

I think that interest has grown since then. By this time, the number of people that know about NoSQL is at least this big: o .

For evidence, let’s take a look at what people are searching for. First, here’s a Google Insights chart for a bunch of popular NoSQL solutions:

MongoDB vs. Cassandra vs. CouchDB vs. Redis vs. Riak (source)

Woohoo! MongoDB seems to be leading the charge, so far. But wait, now let’s compare MongoDB (the top line above) to some other databases:

MongoDB vs. Sybase vs. PostgreSQL vs. Firebird vs. Sqlite (source)

Okay, well, we’re behind everyone, but it’s not too bad. You start to see some patterns with the relational databases that you don’t yet so much with the NoSQL databases: people are using relational databases a lot more at work (during the week) than for fun (on the weekends). In fact, MongoDB is occasionally inching above Sybase on the weekends!

How about MySQL, SQL Server, and Oracle?

MongoDB vs. MySQL vs. SQL Server vs. Oracle (source)

Sigh. Back to work, people. We have a ways to go.

Source:http://www.snailinaturtleneck.com/blog/2011/05/05/nosql-vs-the-world/

Published at DZone with permission of Kristina Chodorow, author and DZone MVB.

(Note: Opinions expressed in this article and its replies are the opinions of their respective authors and not those of DZone, Inc.)

Neo Technology and DataStax are leading the charge for the NoSQL movement.  You can learn more about the Neo4j Graph Database in the project discussion forums and try out the new Spring Data Neo4j, which enables POJO-based development.  You can also see how Apache Cassandra, a ColumnFamily data store, is pushing the boundaries of persistence with cloud capabilities and deployments at SocialFlow and Netflix.