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Impressive although reading that they used 448 cores on super-expensive Intel lab machines takes the edge off a little


We use it on inexpensive second hand R810s with 256G of ram and 4x 10-core xeons of yesteryear. These can be found reasonably cheap: https://m.ebay.ca/itm/Dell-Poweredge-R810-II-4x-Ten-Core-Xeo...

Edit: while these cpus don't have avx/avx2, they still give good results and don't cost $40,000 per server. The best value system with avx2 would be a dual e5-2650v3 such as this one: https://m.ebay.ca/itm/DELL-POWEREDGE-R430-SERVER-2-X-E5-2650...


What's the licensing cost for MemSQL per server for this?


If you go with Enterprise edition (we use community) it used to be in the 4-digits for a support contract and some operational niceties (streaming native backup and restore).


They no longer seem to have a community offering, only paid. Also, having asked at one point, they say their pricing starts at $25K/year.


They renamed the CE to "Dev Edition" and I think now commercial use is prohibited.


They used to try and confuse the issue to make it seem like they were open source, now they don't even have a free to use option?

"Start Using MemSQL Community Edition Now Unlimited scale and capacity. Free forever.".... Free forever right? Now it doesn't exist.


1,280,625,752,550 rows per second is pretty impressive even if it was done on a million dollar's worth of CPU.


So, for anyone who thought the headline was a little bit excessive, it looks like this article is using short-scale trillion and billion.


Who uses the long scale in English?


Um. England? (Except the BBC and parliament, and I have no idea why.)


And do you have a business use case that requires that?


I've worked on a ton of businesses cases that require it. This is what I worked on for years.

It's generally a large company, large issue sort of problem. You can throw millions in hardware/software into a problem that saves you 100's of millions.


We can solve it quite efficiently. You can define an index on a columnstore table and we will maintain order on a per node basis


Analytics, BI, ...

More about rows/second it's about lowering minutes/operation.


Some people do... but this is about showing the potential.




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