16 December 2011 — MySQL Cluster is a write-scalable, real-time, ACID-compliant transactional database, combining 99.999% availability with the low TCO of open source. The purpose of this guide is to enable you to efficiently evaluate the MySQL Cluster database and determine if it is the right choice for your application, whether as part of a new project or an upgrade to an existing service.
8 November 2011 — Oracle recently provided access to many new MySQL 5.6 features through http://labs.mysql.com for the user community to test and comment on. One notable feature is the InnoDB Full-Text Search (FTS) engine. It lets users build FULLTEXT indexes on InnoDB tables to represent text-based content and speed up searches for words and phrases.
3 October 2011 — MySQL Cluster is one of the fastest growing technologies available from MySQL today. To build on this momentum, we are announcing the second Development Milestone Release (DMR) at Oracle Open World 2011. The MySQL Cluster 7.2.1 builds upon the first DMR (7.2.0) announced in April 2011 with a range of new capabilities designed to enable next generation web services, enhance cross data center scalability and simplify provisioning.
27 July 2011 — MySQL 5.5 has been widely acknowledged to be the best release in the history of MySQL. And, in April 2011, we raised the bar again with Development Milestone Release (DMR) and Early Access (Labs) releases of MySQL 5.6. John Russell did an excellent job of summarizing the features in the "What's New in 5.6" devzone article he posted in April. At OSCON 2011, we are delivering more early access (labs) features for InnoDB and Replication features. These features are focused on better scalability, performance and flexibility. We look forward to community testing and feedback.
18 July 2011 — We interviewed Alexander "Bar" Barkov to discuss the recent improvements in MySQL globalization that enable MySQL users around the world to use the database system more easily and naturally.
29 April 2011 — We talked to Georgi "Joro" Kodinov to discuss the MySQL 5.5 Pluggable Authentication API which enables MySQL to access external authentication sources.
11 April 2011 — The ever increasing performance demands of web-based services has generated significant interest in providing NoSQL access methods to MySQL - enabling users to maintain all of the advantages of their existing relational database infrastructure, while providing blazing fast performance for simple queries, using an API to complement regular SQL access to their data. The HandlerSocket development at DeNA is a great example of community innovation, with a solution implemented as a custom plug-in and protocol for the MySQL server daemon. We are hearing the community say they want NotOnly SQL - they want their trusted SQL RDBMS - plus, they want NoSQL techniques to access that data. So, we are previewing our NotOnlySQL solution for MySQL - delivered via memcached - with implementations to access both the InnoDB and MySQL Cluster (NDB) storage engines.
11 April 2011 — With MySQL 5.5 generally available and being deployed all over the planet, the architects and strategists can start looking ahead to the exciting new thing with "SQL" in its name: MySQL 5.6. MySQL 5.6 builds on the momentum of 5.5, and Oracle's investment and commitment to MySQL, by delivering better performance and scalability.
11 April 2011 — The MySQL Installer for Windows radically simplifies the installation process for all MySQL users on the Windows platform. It only takes minutes from downloading the MySQL Installer to having a ready to use MySQL system on your machine. An easy to use - wizard based - UI will guide you through the installation process. You can select which products you want to have installed on your machine. After the file installation you can configure your system and setup your MySQL server. MySQL Installer also helps you to keep your system up-to-date by offering a simple "Check for Updates" feature. If you choose to run this feature the MySQL Installer will connect to the MySQL.com webpage to check if new versions of your MySQL products are available. Those will then be downloaded and installed with a single mouse click. The MySQL Installer will run on all Windows platforms that are supported by MySQL.
11 April 2011 — The announcements at the Oracle Collaborate and O’Reilly MySQL conferences mark an exciting milestone in the development of the MySQL Cluster database. MySQL Cluster is already proven as a write-scalable, real-time transactional database, combining 99.999% availability with the low TCO of open source. With a distributed, multi-master architecture and no single point of failure, MySQL Cluster scales horizontally on commodity hardware to serve read and write intensive workloads. With these enhancements announced in the Development Milestone Release, MySQL Cluster can be extended to serve a broader range of workloads.
9 March 2011 — In light with the formation of the MySQL Council under the IOUG (Independent Oracle User Group) and two upcoming conferences with a lot of MySQL content - Collaborate 11 and O'Reilly MySQL Conference, we talked to Andy Flower, President of IOUG, Sarah Novotny, recognized MySQL community member and the Council Chair, as well as Lenz Grimmer and Dave Stokes, MySQL community managers at Oracle, on their thoughts and takes of the IOUG and the MySQL community.
25 January 2011 — Recorded Live Interview of Product Manager Mike Frank who explains why MySQL 5.5 offers the best performance on Windows yet.
