PostgreSQL Takes a New Turn

PostgreSQL Takes a New Turn

Jonathan Katz, a principal product manager at Amazon Web Services, discusses the evolution of PostgreSQL in an episode of The New Stack Makers. He notes that PostgreSQL's uses have expanded significantly since its inception and now cover a wide range of applications and workloads. Initially considered niche, it faced competition from both open-source and commercial relational database systems. Katz's involvement in the PostgreSQL community began as an app developer, and he later contributed by organizing events.

PostgreSQL originated from academic research at the University of California at Berkeley in the mid-1980s, becoming an open-source project in 1994. In the mid-1990s, proprietary databases like Oracle, IBM DB2, and Microsoft SQL dominated the market, while open-source alternatives like MySQL, MariaDB, and SQLite emerged.

PostgreSQL 16 introduces logical replication from standby servers, enhancing scalability by offloading work from the primary server. The meticulous design process within the PostgreSQL community leads to stable and reliable features. Katz mentions the development of Direct I/O as a long-term feature to reduce latency and improve data writing performance, although it will take several years to implement.

Amazon Web Services has built Amazon RDS on PostgreSQL to simplify application development for developers. This managed service handles operational tasks such as deployment, backups, and monitoring, allowing developers to focus on their applications. Amazon RDS supports multiple PostgreSQL releases, making it easier for businesses to manage and maintain their databases.

Learn more from The New Stack about PostgreSQL and AWS:

PostgreSQL 16 Expands Analytics Capabilities

Powertools for AWS Lambda Grows with Help of Volunteers

How Donating Open Source Code Can Advance Your Career

Tämä jakso on lisätty Podme-palveluun avoimen RSS-syötteen kautta eikä se ole Podmen omaa tuotantoa. Siksi jakso saattaa sisältää mainontaa.

Jaksot(300)

Why MotherDuck refuses to fork DuckDB

Why MotherDuck refuses to fork DuckDB

At a recent MCP developer summit, The New Stack spoke with Till Döhmen, AI lead atMotherDuck, about the company’s growing role in the evolving DuckDB ecosystem. Backed by investors includingTomasz Tun...

27 Touko 27min

JetBrains is selling independence as the rest of AI coding picks sides

JetBrains is selling independence as the rest of AI coding picks sides

JetBrains is positioning itself as the last major independent AI coding-tool vendor in a market increasingly tied to hyperscalers and foundation model labs. Speaking at Google Cloud Next, JetBrains VP...

21 Touko 26min

Why Block handed Goose to the Linux Foundation

Why Block handed Goose to the Linux Foundation

What began as an internal developer tool atBlockhas evolved into a broader open-source initiative with industry backing. Goose, Block’s AI coding agent, followed a path similar to Amazon’s transformat...

15 Touko 19min

Fivetran's CPO: closed data stacks won't survive the agent era

Fivetran's CPO: closed data stacks won't survive the agent era

At Google Cloud Next 2026, Fivetran Chief Product Officer Anjan Kundavaram argued that enterprise data systems are unprepared for the scale of AI-driven analytics. Unlike humans, AI agents can generat...

13 Touko 22min

The new FinOps problem isn't cloud bills

The new FinOps problem isn't cloud bills

At Google Cloud Next 2026, Finout co-founder and CEO Roi Ravhon and Google Cloud FinOps lead Pathik Sharma discussed how FinOps is rapidly evolving for the AI era. Ravhon argued that while cloud FinOp...

12 Touko 28min

How Microsoft is governing thousands of Kubernetes clusters without manual intervention

How Microsoft is governing thousands of Kubernetes clusters without manual intervention

Managing Kubernetes at fleet scale introduces significant complexity, especially as organizations expand from a few clusters to hundreds or thousands across cloud, on-premises, and edge environments. ...

7 Touko 25min

Why long-running AI agents break on HTTP and how Ably is fixing it

Why long-running AI agents break on HTTP and how Ably is fixing it

In this episode ofThe New Stack Makers, Matthew O’Riordan, CEO of Ably, explains how infrastructure originally built for human collaboration is now well-suited for long-running AI agents. While Ably i...

6 Touko 31min

Why the Linux Foundation adopted MCP, with Jim Zemlin and Mazin Gilbert

Why the Linux Foundation adopted MCP, with Jim Zemlin and Mazin Gilbert

Agentic AI is advancing rapidly, with open-source projects racing to keep pace with real-world deployment. To accelerate progress, the Linux Foundation consolidated key technologies—Model Context Prot...

6 Touko 32min

Suosittua kategoriassa Politiikka ja uutiset

uutiscast
aikalisa
politiikan-puskaradio
rss-ootsa-kuullut-tasta
ootsa-kuullut-tasta-2
rss-vaalirankkurit-podcast
rss-podme-livebox
otetaan-yhdet
tervo-halme
et-sa-noin-voi-sanoo-esittaa
rss-asiastudio
the-ulkopolitist
rss-ulkopoditiikkaa
rss-pinnalla
rss-kaikki-uusiksi
rss-vain-talouselamaa