Another item to take into consideration is market share. Most of the time it is wiser to use the most popular application and not the best. On Saturday 2003-06-14 08:45, Nick Estes wrote: > I can't tell you much about mysql, but I have been using postgresql for a > few years now. On the last project I was on, we were using postgres to > handle a database that grew by more than 1GB/day (I don't recall how many > millions of rows that represented), and we were able to tune it to get the > performance we needed on pretty standard servers. It supports > transactions, triggers, stored procedures, subqueries, and I have yet to > come up with a join that it couldn't do (In my current project, we > routinely use every sort of join except for a cross join to get our data > out the way we like it). If you're doing anything the IPs or network > addresses, it also has some sweet special data types and operators for > them. > > As for an unbiased comparison between postgres & mysql, your best bet > might be to talk to people who are good at one or the other and make your > own comparison... Generally speaking, the people with the knowledge you > seek are already fairly biased towards the one they use... > > --Nick > > > --------------------------------------------------- > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us > To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: > http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss