Tom Allison wrote:
You've addressed cost and performance.
Not much left.

Try it out for yourself and see if it works for you.

+ elephant in logo
- unpronounceable name
+ excellent mailing lists
+ excellent developer community
- you can download as many copies as you like and a salesman still won't take you out to lunch

If you want specific vs each DB...

MSSQL obviously integrates nicely with the rest of the MS developer tools. If you're planning a .NET (TM) deployment over a range of Windows (TM) systems and have a lot of experiences MS developers in-house then it's perhaps the default choice.

Oracle has much more experience running on top-end hardware than PG. If you've got the in-depth knowledge and/or the money then you can push it further.

On the other hand, I can buy a 2-cpu x 4-core machine with 16GB RAM and half-a-dozen disks for £5k from dell (not that you necessarily would). That's a lot of oomph for the money - think what it would have cost five years ago.

Add Debian + PostgreSQL, total cost=£5k.

Add Windows + SQL Server, total cost = £12k

--
  Richard Huxton
  Archonet Ltd

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