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Nosql For Mere Mortals

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NoSQL for Mere Mortals is an easy practical guide to succeeding with NoSQL in your environment. Students are guided step-by-step through choosing technologies designing high-performance databases and planning for long-term maintenance. The author introduces each type of NoSQL database shows how to install and manage them and demonstrates how to leverage their features while avoiding common mistakes that lead to poor performance and unmet requirements. He uses four popular NoSQL databases as reference models MongoDB a document database Cassandra a column family data store Redis a key-value database and Neo4j a graph database.

544 pages, Paperback

First published February 25, 2015

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About the author

Dan Sullivan

13 books
Librarian Note: There is more than one author by this name in the Goodreads database.

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Philip.
4 reviews7 followers
December 17, 2019
A good book covering a range of NoSQL databases covering a wide range of database types. It covers both practical considerations for running NoSQL databases distributed by giving an understanding of the underlying technology as well as best-practices for database modeling.

The book is structured like a text schoolbook which is both good and bad. It features quizzes at the end of each chapter which may be useful to ensure you have grasped the concepts. (Answers in the end of the book, I personally missed that.) The structure comes at the cost of a lot of repetition of information, something which becomes a bit annoying if you are reading it back-to-back during a short period as I did. The repetition is often found between different parts making it suitable as a book to refresh your memory, especially of terminology, long after reading it initially. Something I imagine would be especially useful for people with a business background.

On a more personal level I found the book covering a lot of things I am already very familiar with, but it is still nice to have my self acquired knowledge validated as industry best-practice. Reading things I already knew did however become a bit dull. This is however no fault of the book and would probably be great for people not as familiar with distributed systems.

I read the official EPUB version and it was nicely formatted and I had no issues reading it on my e-reader.

A good book for system administrators and software developers who will most likely be fine working with NoSQL after reading this book. It is also worth reading for database designers, especially those coming from RDBMS. Worth noting however, which may be obvious, that this is not a mastery guide of NoSQL for advanced database designers as it is not something this book intends to be in my perception. For database designers this serves better as an in-depth introduction enabling functional design and covering the most common pitfalls but does not cover all fields.

In conclusion I recommend reading this book if you wish to learn more about NoSQL.
5 reviews
January 29, 2018
Quite useful for complete beginners although more difficult than other books from "for mere metals" series. Author included a lot of technical information about storing data on servers etc. which might be a bit overwhelming for someone trying to get the concept (not sure if they are necessary). I enjoyed the part about graph databases the most. After reading this book you should not expect to be able to create your own database. It'll rather give you an idea of what you still have to learn (which is positive considering target audience and number of pages). Worth reading if you're wondering about alternatives for relational database model and what's behind mysterious "NoSQL" term.
Profile Image for Sarah.
371 reviews4 followers
April 24, 2020
This is a good introductory text to different types of noSQL databases. It discusses four categories of noSQL dbs, their strengths and weaknesses, how to design your data to take the most advantage of their strengths, and basic introductions to example databases of each type. This is more of a conceptual introduction than a practical text, so if you're looking to learn any particular nosql in depth, this is not the text for you.
Profile Image for Suphatra.
253 reviews25 followers
August 6, 2021
Best of all the NoSQL manuals I have read (and I have had to read a lot, because of my job). It deep dives into NoSQL but also covers the wide range of NoSQL offerings (key value, columnar, JSON documents, etc). This is an entry level book, so do not be intimidated -- this would be a great resource for anyone who has a working knowledge of relational databases and never worked with non-relational databases before.
Profile Image for Soheil Karami.
15 reviews5 followers
April 23, 2018
این کتاب من نسخه pdf مطالعه می کردم
متاستفانه کیفیت کتابی که داشتم اصلا خوب نبود و بعضی صفحات شاید دو خط از اول و اخرش و نداشت و به سختی می شد کتاب رو مطالعه کرد.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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