On Jan 17, 2008 1:43 PM, Tom Hart <tomhart@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Obviously emotion has gotten the better of me which is why I won't post > to the drupal boards/lists Really, honestly, you're controlling it quite well. Passion is fine. As long as the lists stay civil, passion has its place. > (I might be accused of flaming and I don't > want to paint the pgSQL community in a negative light), but I think that > somebody should let the drupal people know that we're still here and > we'd like to use the new drupal, just not on mySQL. > > Oh, and a collective middle finger to anybody that says the pg community > is too small to bother with. I agree. What gets me is the tortured logic I read in the post by nk on the drupal board. Two examples: 1: With MySQL 5.0 and 5.1, there's no need for pgsql This statement shows that he knows nothing of the differences of the two database engines of which he speaks. And when you don't know anything about a subject, it's best to ask someone who does. 2: There's only 5% of drupal users that use pgsql, therefore they aren't important. -- The fact that PostgreSQL isn't fully supported (i.e. some modules don't work) and it STILL has a 5% user base in Drupal is actually a testament to the pgsql userbase. They're willing to climb uphill to get drupal working on their chosen platform. If drupal properly support pgsql, it might well be a much higher percentage that chose to run on top of pgsql. -- Which users are those 5%? Maybe they're the sites that really show off drupal to the public, maybe they're internal sites for very large corporates, or maybe they're sites that just need to make sure the accounting is done right. I just read Ivan's post, and I agree, it sounds like people who learned bad habits on mysql and are now whinging about their mysql inspired sql not working on other platforms. ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 2: Don't 'kill -9' the postmaster