This book celebrates Michael Stonebraker's accomplishments that led to his 2014 ACM A.M. Turing Award "for fundamental contributions to the concepts and practices underlying modern database systems." The book describes, for the broad computing community, the unique nature, significance, and impact of Mike's achievements in advancing modern database systems over more than forty years. Today, data is considered the world's most valuable resource, whether it is in the tens of millions of databases used to manage the world's businesses and governments, in the billions of databases in our…mehr
This book celebrates Michael Stonebraker's accomplishments that led to his 2014 ACM A.M. Turing Award "for fundamental contributions to the concepts and practices underlying modern database systems." The book describes, for the broad computing community, the unique nature, significance, and impact of Mike's achievements in advancing modern database systems over more than forty years. Today, data is considered the world's most valuable resource, whether it is in the tens of millions of databases used to manage the world's businesses and governments, in the billions of databases in our smartphones and watches, or residing elsewhere, as yet unmanaged, awaiting the elusive next generation of database systems. Every one of the millions or billions of databases includes features that are celebrated by the 2014 Turing Award and are described in this book. Why should I care about databases? What is a database? What is data management? What is a database management system (DBMS)? These are just some of the questions that this book answers, in describing the development of data management through the achievements of Mike Stonebraker and his over 200 collaborators. In reading the stories in this book, you will discover core data management concepts that were developed over the two greatest eras (so far) of data management technology. The book is a collection of 36 stories written by Mike and 38 of his collaborators: 23 world-leading database researchers, 11 world-class systems engineers, and 4 business partners. If you are an aspiring researcher, engineer, or entrepreneur you might read these stories to find these turning points as practice to tilt at your own computer-science windmills, to spur yourself to your next step of innovation and achievement.
Michael L. Brodie has over 45 years of experience in research and industrial practice in databases, distributed systems, integration, artificial intelligence, and multidisciplinary problem-solving. Dr. Brodie is a research scientist at the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; advises startups; serves on advisory boards of national and international research organizations; and is an adjunct professor at the National University of Ireland, Galway and at the University of Technology, Sydney. As Chief Scientist of IT at Verizon for over 20 years, he was responsible for advanced technologies, architectures, and methodologies for IT strategies and for guiding industrial-scale deployments of emerging technologies. He has served on several National Academy of Science committees. Current interests include Big Data, Data Science, and Information Systems evolution. Dr. Brodie holds a Ph.D. in databases from the University of Toronto and a Doctor of Science(honoris causa) from the National University of Ireland.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Data Management Technology Kairometer: The Historical Context 2. Foreword 3. Preface 4. Introduction 5. PART I 2014 ACM A.M. TURING AWARD PAPER AND LECTURE 6. The Land Sharks Are on the Squawk Box 7. PART II MIKE STONEBRAKER'S CAREER 8. 1. Make it Happen: The Life of Michael Stonebraker 9. PART III MIKE STONEBRAKER SPEAKS OUT: AN INTERVIEW WITH MARIANNE WINSLETT 10. 2. Mike Stonebraker Speaks Out: An Interview 11. PART IV THE BIG PICTURE 12. 3. Leadership and Advocacy 13. 4. Perspectives: The 2014 ACM Turing Award 14. 5. Birth of an Industry: Path to the Turing Award 15. 6. A Perspective of Mike from a 50-Year Vantage Point 16. PART V STARTUPS 17. 7. How to Start a Company in Five (Not So) Easy Steps 18. 8. How to Create and Run a Stonebraker Startup-- The Real Story 19. 9. Getting Grownups in the Room: A VC Perspective 20. PART VI DATABASE SYSTEMS RESEARCH 21. 10. Where Good Ideas Come From and How to Exploit Them 22. 11. Where We Have Failed 23. 12. Stonebraker and Open Source 24. 13. The Relational Database Management Systems Genealogy 25. PART VII CONTRIBUTIONS BY SYSTEM 26. 14. Research Contributions of Mike Stonebraker: An Overview 27. PART VII.A RESEARCH CONTRIBUTIONS BY SYSTEM 28. 15. The Later Ingres Years 29. 16. Looking Back at Postgres 30. 17. Databases Meet the Stream Processing Era 31. 18. C-Store: Through the Eyes of a Ph.D. Student 32. 19. In-Memory, Horizontal, and Transactional: The H-Store OLTP DBMS Project 33. 20. Scaling Mountains: SciDB and Scientific Data Management 34. 21. Data Unification at Scale: Data Tamer 35. 22. The BigDAWG Polystore System 36. 23. Data Civilizer: End-to-End Support for Data Discovery, Integration, and Cleaning 37. PART VII.B CONTRIBUTIONS FROM BUILDING SYSTEMS 38. 24. The Commercial Ingres Codeline 39. 25. The Postgres and Illustra Codelines 40. 26. The Aurora/Borealis/SteamBase Codelines: A Tale of Three Systems 41. 27. The Vertica Codeline 42. 28. The VoltDB Codeline 43. 29. The SciDB Codeline: Crossing the Chasm 44. 30. The Tamr Codeline 45. 31. The BigDAWG Codeline 46. PART VIII PERSPECTIVES 47. 32. IBM Relational Database Code Bases 48. 33. Aurum: A Story about Research Taste 49. 34. Nice: Or What It Was Like to Be Mike's Student 50. 35. Michael Stonebraker: Competitor, Collaborator, Friend 51. 36. The Changing of the Database Guard 52. PART IX SEMINAL WORKS OF MICHAEL STONEBRAKER AND HIS COLLABORATORS 53. OTLP Through the Looking Glass, and What We Found There 54. ""One Size Fits All"": An Idea Whose Time Has Come and Gone 55. The End of an Architectural Era (It's Time for a Complete Rewrite) 56. C-Store: A Column-Oriented DBMS 57. The Implementation of POSTGRES 58. The Design and Implementation of INGRES 59. The Collected Works of Michael Stonebraker 60. References 61. Index 62. Biographies
1. Data Management Technology Kairometer: The Historical Context 2. Foreword 3. Preface 4. Introduction 5. PART I 2014 ACM A.M. TURING AWARD PAPER AND LECTURE 6. The Land Sharks Are on the Squawk Box 7. PART II MIKE STONEBRAKER'S CAREER 8. 1. Make it Happen: The Life of Michael Stonebraker 9. PART III MIKE STONEBRAKER SPEAKS OUT: AN INTERVIEW WITH MARIANNE WINSLETT 10. 2. Mike Stonebraker Speaks Out: An Interview 11. PART IV THE BIG PICTURE 12. 3. Leadership and Advocacy 13. 4. Perspectives: The 2014 ACM Turing Award 14. 5. Birth of an Industry: Path to the Turing Award 15. 6. A Perspective of Mike from a 50-Year Vantage Point 16. PART V STARTUPS 17. 7. How to Start a Company in Five (Not So) Easy Steps 18. 8. How to Create and Run a Stonebraker Startup-- The Real Story 19. 9. Getting Grownups in the Room: A VC Perspective 20. PART VI DATABASE SYSTEMS RESEARCH 21. 10. Where Good Ideas Come From and How to Exploit Them 22. 11. Where We Have Failed 23. 12. Stonebraker and Open Source 24. 13. The Relational Database Management Systems Genealogy 25. PART VII CONTRIBUTIONS BY SYSTEM 26. 14. Research Contributions of Mike Stonebraker: An Overview 27. PART VII.A RESEARCH CONTRIBUTIONS BY SYSTEM 28. 15. The Later Ingres Years 29. 16. Looking Back at Postgres 30. 17. Databases Meet the Stream Processing Era 31. 18. C-Store: Through the Eyes of a Ph.D. Student 32. 19. In-Memory, Horizontal, and Transactional: The H-Store OLTP DBMS Project 33. 20. Scaling Mountains: SciDB and Scientific Data Management 34. 21. Data Unification at Scale: Data Tamer 35. 22. The BigDAWG Polystore System 36. 23. Data Civilizer: End-to-End Support for Data Discovery, Integration, and Cleaning 37. PART VII.B CONTRIBUTIONS FROM BUILDING SYSTEMS 38. 24. The Commercial Ingres Codeline 39. 25. The Postgres and Illustra Codelines 40. 26. The Aurora/Borealis/SteamBase Codelines: A Tale of Three Systems 41. 27. The Vertica Codeline 42. 28. The VoltDB Codeline 43. 29. The SciDB Codeline: Crossing the Chasm 44. 30. The Tamr Codeline 45. 31. The BigDAWG Codeline 46. PART VIII PERSPECTIVES 47. 32. IBM Relational Database Code Bases 48. 33. Aurum: A Story about Research Taste 49. 34. Nice: Or What It Was Like to Be Mike's Student 50. 35. Michael Stonebraker: Competitor, Collaborator, Friend 51. 36. The Changing of the Database Guard 52. PART IX SEMINAL WORKS OF MICHAEL STONEBRAKER AND HIS COLLABORATORS 53. OTLP Through the Looking Glass, and What We Found There 54. ""One Size Fits All"": An Idea Whose Time Has Come and Gone 55. The End of an Architectural Era (It's Time for a Complete Rewrite) 56. C-Store: A Column-Oriented DBMS 57. The Implementation of POSTGRES 58. The Design and Implementation of INGRES 59. The Collected Works of Michael Stonebraker 60. References 61. Index 62. Biographies
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