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Google has launched a version of their AlloyDB that can be installed on-premises. AlloyDB is a PostgreSQL compatible cloud database, a full-managed PaaS service. However, they are giving away a free developer edition and a paid for commercial license that can be installed where a customer wants to run it. The new product is called AlloyDB Omni.
I like Google's approach here. Obviously Google would prefer lots of their customers would move to the cloud version hosted in GCP (Google Cloud Platform), but they know that's not realistic. Even for customers that want to move to GCP, the customers might need to keep some workloads on-premises for a period time, so Google is giving them an option to modernize their workload with a new datastore that is PostgreSQL compatible, but running on-premises. Presumably this will be compatible with the cloud version and if customers want to, they can just shift to AlloyDB.
Read the rest of Coming Out of the Cloud
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Google has launched a version of their AlloyDB that can be installed on-premises. AlloyDB is a PostgreSQL compatible cloud database, a full-managed PaaS service. However, they are giving away a free developer edition and a paid for commercial license that can be installed where a customer wants to run it. The new product is called AlloyDB Omni.
I like Google's approach here. Obviously Google would prefer lots of their customers would move to the cloud version hosted in GCP (Google Cloud Platform), but they know that's not realistic. Even for customers that want to move to GCP, the customers might need to keep some workloads on-premises for a period time, so Google is giving them an option to modernize their workload with a new datastore that is PostgreSQL compatible, but running on-premises. Presumably this will be compatible with the cloud version and if customers want to, they can just shift to AlloyDB.
Read the rest of Coming Out of the Cloud