MongoDB vs. Redis
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@scottalanmiller said in MongoDB vs. Redis:
Are there new hipster names for DBAs? We see the opposite, suddenly hipsters call everyone DBAs, even people very far removed from the database.
I see a lot of "data scientists" and "data engineers" who really are people with a bit of python, some basic statistics and knowledge of SQL
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@dyasny said in MongoDB vs. Redis:
@scottalanmiller said in MongoDB vs. Redis:
Are there new hipster names for DBAs? We see the opposite, suddenly hipsters call everyone DBAs, even people very far removed from the database.
I see a lot of "data scientists" and "data engineers" who really are people with a bit of python, some basic statistics and knowledge of SQL
Ah, I see.
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@dyasny said in MongoDB vs. Redis:
@scottalanmiller said in MongoDB vs. Redis:
Are there new hipster names for DBAs? We see the opposite, suddenly hipsters call everyone DBAs, even people very far removed from the database.
I see a lot of "data scientists" and "data engineers" who really are people with a bit of python, some basic statistics and knowledge of SQL
I'm a "data scientist" or "data engineer", who knew?
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@travisdh1 said in MongoDB vs. Redis:
I'm a "data scientist" or "data engineer", who knew?
Just drink your smoothie, you hipster you
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@scottalanmiller Sorry I wasnt around here then. However Ive been a rackspace customer since then lol
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@dyasny Oh thats why I never hear the dba title thrown around anymore, its evolved I guess.
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@jmoore said in MongoDB vs. Redis:
@dyasny Oh thats why I never hear the dba title thrown around anymore, its evolved I guess.
I think, with all the NoSQL around, DBAs are considered "those old farts doing Oracle in the basement". The term is just not as flashy as "ninja unicorn narwhal rock star"
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@jmoore said in MongoDB vs. Redis:
@dyasny Oh thats why I never hear the dba title thrown around anymore, its evolved I guess.
It's not, DBA is always a DBA. Actual DBAs have never changed.
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@dyasny said in MongoDB vs. Redis:
@jmoore said in MongoDB vs. Redis:
@dyasny Oh thats why I never hear the dba title thrown around anymore, its evolved I guess.
I think, with all the NoSQL around, DBAs are considered "those old farts doing Oracle in the basement". The term is just not as flashy as "ninja unicorn narwhal rock star"
Also not needed as much. Modern databases still need people who understand them, but it isn't like you are sitting there twisting the knobs all day like you used to in the 1980s.
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@dyasny lol I love that one!
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@scottalanmiller I mean the term, not the role. Sorry I thought that was apparent.
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@scottalanmiller I see DBAs in large organizations, managing large databases, obviously, it's not about knobs anymore, but more about optimizing queries, load distribution, analytics around the DB use etc.
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@jmoore I would love it too, if I didn't get to hear it so much, especially from recruiters who don't know anything about IT, so instead of catching up on tech at least to be able to read a CV, they just use a bunch of flashy words and hope that's what will catch the more expensive talent for them to market.
In fact, I just got almost this very phrase from a 60 year old recruiter, who called me and claimed I was one, and that he would love to set me up with a new job. I wish a hung up phone was able to hit people on the ass as well as a closed door can
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@dyasny Haha right. Though I don't see how just using some flashy marketing terms would actually get good talent.
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@dyasny said in MongoDB vs. Redis:
@scottalanmiller I see DBAs in large organizations, managing large databases, obviously, it's not about knobs anymore, but more about optimizing queries, load distribution, analytics around the DB use etc.
Oh I still see them. Just less of them.
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@jmoore said in MongoDB vs. Redis:
@scottalanmiller I mean the term, not the role. Sorry I thought that was apparent.
It's still the only term for the actual role
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@jmoore said in MongoDB vs. Redis:
... I don't see how just using some flashy marketing terms would actually get good talent.
my point exactly!
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@dyasny said in MongoDB vs. Redis:
@jmoore said in MongoDB vs. Redis:
... I don't see how just using some flashy marketing terms would actually get good talent.
my point exactly!
Not really what companies using recruiters like that want. It's mostly a myth that people want to hire great talent. Most places want to hire cool sounding, middling talent.