Good find Laurent! All graph-related efforts are for popularizing this view on data. HypgraphDB is using BerkelyDB in the background. We actually had that backend in the early days of Neo4j as an option but it just wasn't up to our performance requirements in the end. Also, we had problems handling transactions on top of BerkeleyDB.
If you are interested in Hypergraphs, there is a section in Gremlin on how to model Hypergraphs in a labelled graph: http://wiki.github.com/tinkerpop/gremlin/modeling-hypergraphs Cheers, /peter neubauer COO and Sales, Neo Technology GTalk: neubauer.peter Skype peter.neubauer Phone +46 704 106975 LinkedIn http://www.linkedin.com/in/neubauer Twitter http://twitter.com/peterneubauer http://www.neo4j.org - Your high performance graph database. http://gremlin.tinkerpop.com - PageRank in 2 lines of code. On Wed, Jan 27, 2010 at 2:24 PM, Laurent Laborde <kerdez...@gmail.com> wrote: > With the success of Neo4j as a graph database in the NoSQL revolution, > it's interesting to see another graph database, HyperGraphDB, in the > mix. > Full article : > http://highscalability.com/blog/2010/1/26/product-hypergraphdb-a-graph-database.html > > -- > Laurent "ker2x" Laborde > Sysadmin & DBA at http://www.over-blog.com/ > _______________________________________________ > Neo mailing list > User@lists.neo4j.org > https://lists.neo4j.org/mailman/listinfo/user > _______________________________________________ Neo mailing list User@lists.neo4j.org https://lists.neo4j.org/mailman/listinfo/user