The Stardog Blog
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A reason many graph databases don’t offer reasoning is that it is difficult to engineer correctly. Most vendors simply don’t have the skill or expertise required to do it right.
One of the most anticipated new features in Stardog 3.0 is the High Availability (HA) Cluster.
Today we’re happy to announce the release of Stardog 3.0.
Stardog 3 is the result of more than 10,000 commits and it’s headed this way. Let’s preview the goodness.
The upcoming Stardog 2.1 release improves query scalability by about 3 orders of magnitude and can handle 50 billion triples on a $10,000 server.
Earlier today we released Stardog 1.2 which you can download for evaluation right now.
Stardog is on the move; we got Stardog 1.0 out the door without anyone dying; we’ve got customers; people are using it; and we released Stardog Community, too.
Today I’m happy to announce the release of Stardog 1.0, the fastest, smartest, and easiest to use RDF database on the planet. Stardog fills a hole in the Semantic Technology (and NoSQL database) market for an RDF database that is fast, zero config, lightweight, and feature-rich.
We’re happy to announce the release of Stardog 0.9, the first feature-complete version of Stardog.
As you may already know, we’re working hard on Stardog, our upcoming RDF database. It’s presently in closed alpha testing (55 testers), at version 0.5.3, and progressing rapidly.
Stardog is a fast, lightweight RDF database. Today we’re announcing limited access to our beta testing program, in preparation for the 1.0 release. If you’re interested in beta-testing Stardog, drop me an email.
Update: Stardog is our entry into the commercial RDF database market. There’s plenty of talk about the purely technical aspects of RDF databases but considerably less talk about the RDF database market as a commercial software business.