Re: The naming question (Postgres vs PostgreSQL)

From: Jim Nasby <decibel(at)decibel(dot)org>
To: Robert Treat <xzilla(at)users(dot)sourceforge(dot)net>
Cc: pgsql-advocacy(at)postgresql(dot)org, "John Wang" <johncwang(at)gmail(dot)com>
Subject: Re: The naming question (Postgres vs PostgreSQL)
Date: 2007-09-03 09:53:58
Message-ID: E5A13408-68CF-472F-A51A-CF2E4092C37B@decibel.org
Views: Raw Message | Whole Thread | Download mbox | Resend email
Thread:
Lists: pgsql-advocacy

On Sep 2, 2007, at 12:16 AM, Robert Treat wrote:
> On Saturday 01 September 2007 13:57, John Wang wrote:
>> On 8/31/07, Ron Mayer <rm_pg(at)cheapcomplexdevices(dot)com> wrote:
>>> Robert Treat wrote:
>>>> That doesnt make it a bad name. There are several very popular
>>>> databases
>>>
>>> that
>>>
>>>> have SQL in thier name.
>>>
>>> But none that insist on pronunciations like "Mice Q. L." for "MySQL"
>>> or "Microsofts Q. L. server" for "Microsoft SQL Server"
>>
>> Good point.
>
> *shrug* it's orthogonal to the original posters assertation though.

As the OP, I'll disagree. :)

For all 3, the SQL portion is used to indicate that the product/
project is a database, while the rest of the name provides context on
who it's from or what it's about:

SQLite: lightweight database
MS SQL Server: Database server from MS
MySQL: this is "My" database engine, it does what I want
--
Decibel!, aka Jim Nasby decibel(at)decibel(dot)org
EnterpriseDB http://enterprisedb.com 512.569.9461 (cell)

In response to

Responses

Browse pgsql-advocacy by date

  From Date Subject
Next Message vincent 2007-09-03 09:58:37 Re: The naming question (Postgres vs PostgreSQL)
Previous Message Jim Nasby 2007-09-03 09:39:59 Re: A renaming analogy