On Dec 16, 2016, at 16:52 , Tom Lane <t...@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
> 
>> So I’ve started a project to fix this. I’m initially going to write a series 
>> of blog posts demonstrating in principle how a developer can put much/all of 
>> their model logic in their database.
> 
> Cool.  This sounds well worth while.

Thanks, Tom.

I had a sort of slowly developing epiphany a few years back as I dug deeper 
into Postgres: it’s not just a database server. The whole rationale for the 
design of Postgres, which it takes considerably further than any of the other 
relational databases, is that it should be a “Model Server”. The pluggable 
languages, data types, FDW and all the rest is there to provide the most 
efficient possible way to implement your domain model, business logic, etc.

I think folks understood this back in the day, but as architectures shifted, 
new paradigms arose, and a new generation came along hungry to do their own 
thing, this perspective has been just completely lost in enormous parts of the 
software development community. The old wisdom, the whole intent of the RDBMS I 
think can now be, weirdly, the radical new thing.

I’m just getting started on this. If anyone has any thoughts on what the role 
of the RDBMS should be in modern software architectures and how that should be 
communicated, please get in touch so I can make this as good as it can be.

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