Over a decade ago, I coined the term NewSQL to describe the new breed of horizontally scalable, relational database products. The term was adopted by a variety of vendors that sought to combine the transactional consistency of the relational database model with elastic, cloud-native scalability. Many of the early NewSQL vendors struggled to gain traction, however, and were either acquired or ceased operations before they could make an impact in the crowded operational data platforms market. Nonetheless, the potential benefits of data platforms that span both on-premises and cloud resources remain. As I recently noted, many of the new operational database vendors have now adopted the term “distributed SQL” to describe their offerings. In addition to new terminology, a key trend that separates distributed SQL vendors from the NewSQL providers that preceded them is a greater focus on developers, laying the foundation for the next generation of applications that will depend on horizontally scalable, relational-database functionality. Yugabyte is a case in point.
Yugabyte was founded in 2016 by former Facebook software engineers to create a database for the rest of the world that would deliver the scalability, reliability, and developer-friendliness that had been required to support the social media giant. Today, the company can claim the likes of Wells Fargo, Kroger, Hudson River Trading, and Narvar as customers, as well as valuation at more than $1.3 billion, based on its recent $188 million Series C funding round. YugabyteDB is the company’s cloud-native, open-source, distributed SQL database. Yugabyte has also made the technology available as YugabyteDB Anywhere, a self-managed cloud database service, and YugabyteDB Managed, a fully-managed cloud database service. Core functionality available in all three offerings includes compatibility with the PostgreSQL open-source database, horizontal scalability, resiliency, geo-distributed data replication, and availability across multiple clouds as well as on-premises data centers. Delivering global scalability and resiliency was a key design concept for YugabyteDB. As data is increasingly stored and processed across a distributed architecture, organizations are looking for vendors that can provide a single, logical, global database that spans multiple compute locations. Almost one-half (49%) of participants in Ventana Research’s Analytics and Data Benchmark Research are using cloud computing for analytics and data, of which 42% are currently using more than one cloud provider. I assert that by 2025, more than three-quarters of enterprises will have data spread across multiple cloud providers and on-premises data centers, requiring investment in data-management products that span multiple locations.
Adoption of distributed SQL databases is still in its early stages, and the failure of many of the NewSQL providers to make an impact on the market is a cautionary tale for the companies in this sector. However, distributed-database functionality has matured since the early days of NewSQL, as have the supporting cloud services and the strategies of vendors to engage with developers to cultivate interest and facilitate adoption. I recommend that any organization exploring the use cases for hybrid and multi-cloud data platforms should evaluate Yugabyte when considering their options.
Regards,
Matt Aslett