StatusNethttps://status.hackerposse.com/api/statusnet/conversation/144340.atomConversation2024-03-28T16:37:42-04:00http://activitystrea.ms/schema/1.0/notetag:n5.federati.net,2020-05-27:noticeId=21171:objectType=noteNew note by n5admin@<a href="https://loadaverage.org/user/124" class="h-card u-url p-nickname mention">xrevan86</a> @<a href="https://libranet.de/profile/clacke" class="h-card u-url p-nickname mention">clacke</a> Years ago, #<span class="tag"><a href="https://n5.federati.net/tag/innodb" rel="tag">InnoDB</a></span> was produced by an independent company, just as #<span class="tag"><a href="https://n5.federati.net/tag/sleepycat" rel="tag">Sleepycat</a></span> (BerkeleyDB ... BDB engine) was. I don't know if it was possible to use InnoDB separately from #<span class="tag"><a href="https://n5.federati.net/tag/mysql" rel="tag">MySQL</a></span> even then. #<span class="tag"><a href="https://n5.federati.net/tag/oracle" rel="tag">Oracle</a></span> bought Sleepycat and then Inno, and finally #<span class="tag"><a href="https://n5.federati.net/tag/sun" rel="tag">Sun.</a></span><br /><br /> I've been using it for somewhere around 20 years (+/-2 years), having encountered it in a college course (replacing Hughes #<span class="tag"><a href="https://n5.federati.net/tag/minisql" rel="tag">MiniSQL</a></span>).http://activitystrea.ms/schema/1.0/post2020-05-27T17:53:56+00:002020-05-27T17:53:56+00:00http://activitystrea.ms/schema/1.0/personhttps://n5.federati.net/index.php/user/1n5adminn5adminN-5-O-bodyhomepagehttps://nu.federati.net/lnxw48a1truehttps://nu.federati.net/conversation/2495336