Hi, a driver for OrientDB would be nice :-)
Best regards, Werner Buchert. Am Dienstag, 29. Juli 2014 15:14:08 UTC+2 schrieb [email protected]: > > Hi Berni, > > Thanks for the idea. I've actually never heard of graph databases. > Googling around I'm wondering why I have not heard of them before, they > seem to be everywhere, and I understand the use cases. > > This would definitely be interesting, it might be a little too much for me > at this point. But I will continue to look into this in the next couple > weeks. > > Best Regards, > Alex > > On Monday, July 28, 2014 3:14:07 PM UTC+2, Bernie wrote: >> >> Hi Alex, >> >> I'm surprised nobody responded so far, so let me enter my personal >> favourite topic. >> >> One of the biggest problems I am currently facing with Erlang in general >> is its practically none existing support for graph databases. There is a >> Neo4j driver and while it may be a fine DB, it's also horribly expensive >> for commercial use. >> Free, and for many use cases better choices exist, but are limited to >> using the REST interface which is slower and often doesn't offer the full >> capabilities of the respective native interface. >> >> So my hope would be for a native driver for one of the better FOSS graph >> DBs that could be wrapped into a boss_db module, but also be used >> stand-alone from generic Erlang programs. A Tinkerpop/Gremlin >> implementation would be cool too. >> >> I realize there is probably limited interest in graphs in the CB >> community. But since anything you can attach a big data label to seems to >> have potential these days, you might be able to get something out of it for >> yourself as well. >> And if you could throw in some data visualization library it would be >> even more amazing ;) >> >> Anyway, hoping you like my ideas and best regards, >> Bernie >> >> >> On Thursday, July 24, 2014 7:35:58 AM UTC-4, [email protected] wrote: >>> >>> Hi Everyone, >>> >>> I am currently finishing my computer science studies and am looking for >>> ideas for a semester or bachelor project. >>> >>> I must first confess that I do not have any Erlang or Elixir experience. >>> I have alot of work experience with Python ( especially with Django ) , >>> Objective C, and C++. I understand that Erlang is a completely different >>> thing. I am very curious about ChicagoBoss though and would very much like >>> to contribute. I am a fast learner and I do have alot of work experience >>> with web frameworks. >>> >>> The seminar project should be no less that 120 hours of work, with a >>> focus on implementation. The bachelor project, no less that 360 hours with >>> an additional focus on theory. I will be documenting my work as I go, >>> results would be open to the public. Any input or guidance in the form of >>> mentoring would be appreciated but is not a requirement. >>> >>> I would love to be able to invest this effort into something that would >>> be usefull to the ChicagoBoss community. I've watched some of the Evan >>> Millar youtube talks and find them really inspiring. Maybe there is a >>> killer-module from the Django or RoR world that would be great to have as a >>> ChicagoBoss add-on? Any ideas would be appreciated. >>> >>> Thanks in advance, >>> Alex Gustafson >>> >> -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "ChicagoBoss" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/chicagoboss. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/chicagoboss/ebfdb56e-2166-4e96-8834-853291867b82%40googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
