Introduction to Apache CouchDB
A hands-on virtual meetup with Apache CouchDB, a NoSQL database, with Upkar Lidder of IBM.
Developers’ relationship with databases has evolved enormously in the past decade, driven in large part by the cloud and by the rise of NoSQL. Many developers abandoned relational databases, but often at the cost of the consistency they provided. In this session, Rob Sutter shows how new algorithms enable databases that provide consistency, relations, scale, distribution, and speed without sacrificing the developer experience.
The last 20 years have burned the CAP theorem and a false binary choice between NoSQL or relational databases into developers’ brains. We have always heard that databases have to make a choice; either they focus on correct relational data or they focus on distribution, scale, and speed. Developer experience and the consequent user experience has been an afterthought. Today, new algorithms enable databases that provide consistency, relations, scale, distribution, and speed without sacrificing the developer experience. In this talk, we debunk a number of myths and show how Fauna combines the guarantees of relational databases with the power of NoSQL.
Rob Sutter has woven application development into his entire career, from time in the U.S. Army and U.S. Government to stints with the Big Four and Amazon Web Services. He has started his own company – twice – once providing consulting services and most recently with WorkFone, a software as a service startup that provided virtual digital identities to government clients. Rob loves to build in public with cloud architectures, Node.js or Go, and all things serverless!
A hands-on virtual meetup with Apache CouchDB, a NoSQL database, with Upkar Lidder of IBM.
Leon Stigter explains why statefuless is important and how to leverage stateful patterns in your serverless applications.
Moar Serverless is a 1-day conference exploring how real-world applications are built leveraging serverless.
Anant Jhingran will explore whether GraphQL can bridge the divide between the backend and frontend developers by meeting the needs of both.
Simon Prickett explores what Redis is, why developers like it so much, and when to use its unique capabilities.