Linked by Eugenia Loli-Queru on Thu 26th Oct 2006 00:20 UTC, submitted by Anonymous
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RE[5]: well, it is a free market and open source at its b
by jziegler on Fri 27th Oct 2006 13:35
in reply to "RE[4]: well, it is a free market and open source at its b"
a) you don't get RHEL for free (though you can get CentOS / WhiteBox for free)
b) With PostgreSQL for $O, you won't get a phone number which you can call and talk about your screwed-up database
c) There are scenarios, where "big" DBs like Oracle and DB/2 are the only sensible solutions. I don't think MySQL or PostgreSQL would handle multi-GB tablespaces stored in multiple datafiles... Sometimes it's not "features", it's "how big can my DB be and still run and still be manageable".
And sometimes it's about having someone to call/blame when things break. In the end, it's a free market - pay if it's worth to you, don't pay if it's not worth.
RE[6]: well, it is a free market and open source at its b
by Janizary on Sat 28th Oct 2006 18:01
in reply to "RE[5]: well, it is a free market and open source at its b"






Member since:
2006-03-12
Funny, a better example is:
Red Hat Linux: $ 0/year
PostgreSQL: $ 0/year
Oracle: $0 for 30 days, must be licensed after by year
Red Hat cost for best Red Hat version and support: $2499/year
The best support possible for PostgreSQL: $22 500/year
Best support possible for Oracle Enterprise Edition, via Processor Perpetual licence: $44 888, one time fee
But those are just real prices, crazy, I know.