2. From OpenHub (formerly Ohloh)
3,418 Commits made by 196 Contributors
representing 83,764 lines of code
The codebase has a long history maintained by a
large development team
Estimated 21 years of effort starting in Feb 2012
Lines of Code
August 25, 2015 Presentation title goes here2
Trove in a Nutshell…
3. August 25, 2015 Presentation title goes here3
DBaaS Adoption Growing Rapidly
86% year of year growth (451 research)
Source: 451 Research https://451research.com/report-short?entityId=78105
4. DynamoDB is fastest growing service in AWS history
Werner Vogels, AWS CTO, AWS Blog June 2012
45% of Amazon customers have implemented and are
expanding use of RDS (48% for Microsoft Azure SQL)
Jeffrey Hammond, Forrester Blog, September 2013
Redshift is fastest growing AWS service ever
The Register, April 2015
Amazon's Cloud Is The Fastest Growing Software
Business In History
Matt Asay, ReadWriteWeb, July 2014
August 25, 2015 Presentation title goes here4
Amazon has Set the Bar
5. Survey currently underway…
200 Enterprise IT Respondents
12-36 Month Forecast
Public, Private & Hybrid Cloud Environments
Number & Types of Databases
Biggest Barriers and Expected Benefits
451 Research: Matt Aslett, Bob Winter & others
Commissioned by Tesora
Some Early results…
August 25, 2015 Presentation title goes here5
451 Survey on DBaaS Adoption
6. August 25, 2015 Presentation title goes here6
DBaaS Spending - Next 12 Months
77%
21%
2%
Increase
Stay the same
Decrease
7. August 25, 2015 Presentation title goes here7
What Triggered Your Decision to
Purchase/Consider DBaaS?
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25%
Lack of internal skill to manage DBs
Move from public cloud/"shadow IT"
Better elasticity in provisioning
Maint/support costs for installed DBs
Demand for developer agility
Mandate to use cloud to reduce costs
Aging internal infrastructure
Deploying fully cloud-based app suite
One event that stands out as the most significant?
8. August 25, 2015 Presentation title goes here8
Criteria Used for Selecting
DBaaS
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35% 40% 45% 50%
Familiarity with Cloud Service Provider
Vendor Services Support
Reporting options
Vendor Technical Support
Governance, administration and control functions
Built-in analytics
Price
Value
Ease of use for end users
High grade third party security
Support for specific database management system
Ability to integrate with existing production applications
Top Three Criteria