| By Bill McColl | Article Rating: |
|
| October 18, 2010 08:15 AM EDT | Reads: |
14,199 |
Over the past few years, Hadoop has become something of a poster child for the NoSQL movement. Whether it's interpreted as "No SQL" or "Not Only SQL", the message has been clear, if you have big data challenges, then your programming tool of choice should be Hadoop. Sure, continue to use SQL for your ancient legacy stuff, but when you need cutting edge performance and scalability, it's time to go Hadoop.
The only problem with this story is that the people who really do have cutting edge performance and scalability requirements today have already moved on from the Hadoop model. A few have moved back to SQL, but the much more significant trend is that, having come to realize the capabilities and limitations of MapReduce and Hadoop, a whole raft of new post-Hadoop architectures are now being developed that are, in most cases, orders of magnitude faster at scale than Hadoop.
The problem with simple batch processing tools like MapReduce and Hadoop is that they are just not powerful enough in any one of the dimensions of the big data space that really matters. If you need complex joins or ACID requirements, SQL beats Hadoop easily. If you have realtime requirements, Cloudscale beats Hadoop by three or four orders of magnitude. If you have supercomputing requirements, MPI or BSP
The one area where MapReduce/Hadoop wins today is that it's freely available to anyone, but for those that have reasonably challenging big data requirements, that simple type of architecture is nowhere near enough.
Published October 18, 2010 Reads 14,199
Copyright © 2010 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By Bill McColl
Bill McColl left Oxford University to found Cloudscale. At Oxford he was Professor of Computer Science, Head of the Parallel Computing Research Center, and Chairman of the Computer Science Faculty. Along with Les Valiant of Harvard, he developed the BSP approach to parallel programming. He has led research, product, and business teams, in a number of areas: massively parallel algorithms and architectures, parallel programming languages and tools, datacenter virtualization, realtime stream processing, big data analytics, and cloud computing. He lives in Palo Alto, CA.
- Cloud People: A Who's Who of Cloud Computing
- CollabNet And UC4 Announce General Availability Of Joint Enterprise DevOps Platform
- Session Topics: 12th Cloud Expo / Cloud Expo New York
- The Software Freedom Conservancy – Fundraising Campaign: Non-Profit Accounting Software
- MicroStrategy Announces General Availability of MicroStrategy 9.3.1
- MicroStrategy Announces General Availability of MicroStrategy 9.3.1
- Remote Controlling a Car over the Web. Ingredients: Smartphone, WebSocket, and Raspberry Pi.
- Midokura Announces General Availability of Disruptive Network Virtualization Technology
- Social Business Intelligence Book Industry’s First Executive SBI Guide
- The Linux Foundation’s Collaboration – OpenDaylight Project – Open Source SDN
- Tech Trends To Watch In May 2013
- Services Orinted Architecture (SOA) Market
- Cloud People: A Who's Who of Cloud Computing
- SUSE Receives Common Criteria Security Certifications
- Basho Announces Open Source Riak CS and General Availability of Riak CS Enterprise v1.3
- CollabNet And UC4 Announce General Availability Of Joint Enterprise DevOps Platform
- Session Topics: 12th Cloud Expo / Cloud Expo New York
- The Software Freedom Conservancy – Fundraising Campaign: Non-Profit Accounting Software
- MicroStrategy Announces General Availability of MicroStrategy 9.3.1
- MicroStrategy Announces General Availability of MicroStrategy 9.3.1
- Project Floodlight Grows to the World’s Largest SDN Ecosystem; Global Users, Contributors and Partners Innovating Using Open Source SDN
- Mobility News Weekly – Week of March 17, 2013
- Global Information Security Products And Services Industry
- Kevin Benedict’s What’s New in HTML5 – Week of February 24, 2013
- Java Developer's Journal Exclusive: 2006 "JDJ Editors' Choice" Awards
- The i-Technology Right Stuff
- Creating Web Applications with the Eclipse Web Tools Project
- Eclipse Special: Remote Debugging Tomcat & JBoss Apps with Eclipse
- Where Are RIA Technologies Headed in 2008?
- The Next Programming Models, RIAs and Composite Applications
- SYS-CON Webcast: Eclipse IDE for Students, Useful Eclipse Tips & Tricks
- How to Bring Eclipse 3.1, J2SE 5.0, and Tomcat 5.0 Together
- Eclipse: The Story of Web Tools Platform 0.7
- The Top 250 Players in the Cloud Computing Ecosystem
- "Eclipse 3.0 is a Great Leap Forward," Says JDJ's Dudney
- Developing an Eclipse BIRT Report Item Extension
























