If you've ever worked with large scale "enterprise" database warehouses, they tend to be slow and clunky. Back in 2006ish SAP took the whole Data Warehouse (well mainly just the data cubes) and chucked it into a columnar database (at the time it was called TREX, then became BW Accelerator) - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TREX_search_engine
TREX exist way before 2006. SAP also bought a Korean company called P* (IIRC) which did non-columanr (traditional relational) and threw it into memory. SAP also had a produce called APO LiveCache - http://scn.sap.com/community/scm/apo/livecache - which lived around the same time.
This has now all evolved to a standard offering called SAP HANA - http://www.saphana.com/welcome - In it's second year of inception I believe SAP did roughly $360m in sales just on HANA alone.
Also, IIRC is InnoDB basically the open source version of exactly what you're talking about with "Postgres to main memory"?
InnoDB isn't anything like that - it's a transactional database engine that's been around since the 90's and has since become the standard storage engine for MySQL - it competes directly with Postgres' storage layer.
Eh, not really...
This is exactly what SAP has been doing for several years via Hasso Plattner and the Potsdam Institute: https://epic.hpi.uni-potsdam.de/Home/HassoPlattner
If you've ever worked with large scale "enterprise" database warehouses, they tend to be slow and clunky. Back in 2006ish SAP took the whole Data Warehouse (well mainly just the data cubes) and chucked it into a columnar database (at the time it was called TREX, then became BW Accelerator) - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TREX_search_engine
TREX exist way before 2006. SAP also bought a Korean company called P* (IIRC) which did non-columanr (traditional relational) and threw it into memory. SAP also had a produce called APO LiveCache - http://scn.sap.com/community/scm/apo/livecache - which lived around the same time.
This has now all evolved to a standard offering called SAP HANA - http://www.saphana.com/welcome - In it's second year of inception I believe SAP did roughly $360m in sales just on HANA alone.
Also, IIRC is InnoDB basically the open source version of exactly what you're talking about with "Postgres to main memory"?
edit- correction in TimesTen