Обсуждение: List of Large sites using Postgres
I know this may be at least somewhat off the topic in this group, but I figured all of you would be better capable of givinga good answer =) Our company is *finally* toying with the idea of chaning our DB's over to Postgres from Sybase. What they are asking me isif there are any *large* sites using it. Anyone Anyone? By large, I am rather certain they are referring to such thingsas lycos, yahoo, etc... I do believe the concern here is that we host a few sites that use a database backend, andthose sites generate at least 20 million hits a month, and they dont want them to die if we were to change things... Any links or whatever would be GREATLY appreciated =) Thanks Join 18 million Eudora users by signing up for a free Eudora Web-Mail account at http://www.eudoramail.com
good place to scan (and add your project) is: http://www.pgsql.com/register/ Just a quick scan through, stuff that mean something to me: Canadian Tire (Canada-wide Automotive and More chain) http://www.pgsql.com/register/full.php?oid=25323392 Oxford University http://www.pgsql.com/register/full.php?oid=22276827 On Wed, 16 Aug 2000, Oakley wrote: > I know this may be at least somewhat off the topic in this group, but I figured all of you would be better capable of givinga good answer =) > > Our company is *finally* toying with the idea of chaning our DB's over to Postgres from Sybase. What they are asking meis if there are any *large* sites using it. Anyone Anyone? By large, I am rather certain they are referring to such thingsas lycos, yahoo, etc... I do believe the concern here is that we host a few sites that use a database backend, andthose sites generate at least 20 million hits a month, and they dont want them to die if we were to change things... > > Any links or whatever would be GREATLY appreciated =) > > Thanks > > > Join 18 million Eudora users by signing up for a free Eudora Web-Mail account at http://www.eudoramail.com > Marc G. Fournier ICQ#7615664 IRC Nick: Scrappy Systems Administrator @ hub.org primary: scrappy@hub.org secondary: scrappy@{freebsd|postgresql}.org
>lycos, yahoo, etc... I do believe the concern here is that we host a few >sites that use a database backend, and those sites generate at least 20 >million hits a month, and they dont want them to die if we were to change >things... I do believe that you should start by telling management than any changes, regardless of what you move to (be it Oracle, SQL server, Sybase, Postgres, or anything else) will be accompanied by some pitfalls. Everyone knows this, but conveniently forgets it when they can more easily pin the blame on you. Make sure you voice these concerns well before anything happens, so that it's a concious decision to go do something that will cause some pitfalls, no matter how well the conversion goes. It will also make it easier for you when something breaks, you have to tell your boss, and he tells you "I knew we shouldn't have gone with Postgres!", even tho it was something as simple as a typo in the converted code ;) That's all the advice I have for you, and I'd like to see the large list myself... Rob Nelson rdnelson@co.centre.pa.us
Oh. I forget this thread. Anyone knows a great web site backed by PostgreSQL? Thanks, Paulo Henrique Quoting Robert D. Nelson (RDNELSON@co.centre.pa.us): > >lycos, yahoo, etc... I do believe the concern here is that we host a few > >sites that use a database backend, and those sites generate at least 20 > >million hits a month, and they dont want them to die if we were to change > >things... > > I do believe that you should start by telling management than any changes, > regardless of what you move to (be it Oracle, SQL server, Sybase, Postgres, > or anything else) will be accompanied by some pitfalls. Everyone knows this, > but conveniently forgets it when they can more easily pin the blame on you. > Make sure you voice these concerns well before anything happens, so that > it's a concious decision to go do something that will cause some pitfalls, > no matter how well the conversion goes. It will also make it easier for you > when something breaks, you have to tell your boss, and he tells you "I knew > we shouldn't have gone with Postgres!", even tho it was something as simple > as a typo in the converted code ;) > > That's all the advice I have for you, and I'd like to see the large list > myself... > > > Rob Nelson > rdnelson@co.centre.pa.us >