I\'m trying to make an Twitter-like social network platform using MySQL, phpmyad
ID: 3798569 • Letter: I
Question
I'm trying to make an Twitter-like social network platform using MySQL, phpmyadmin, and Neo4j graph.
I was wondering how to implement MySQL, phpmyadmin, and Neo4j graph making the feed be like the user and be re-tweeted (repost)
Each user can sign up with their name, lastname, and email. A user may choose to "follow" other users. A user may post a feed. Each feed might have zero or more comments. A feed may be liked by a user. A feed may be re-tweeted. A comment or a feed should be able to deleted by the owner when needed. There is no restriction of the number of characters for a feed or comment. Login page a person should be able to sign up Main page displays news feeds according to the network of a user (his/her feeds and people he/she follows) Profile page list user's profile information, the people he/she follows and feeds of that user.Explanation / Answer
A)
Twitter confirmed at the MySQL Connect conference on Saturday that it intends to upgrade its 1000-plus servers from its modified version of MySQL.Twitter and LinkedIn count among several web-scale MySQL users that have waited on the sidelines for close to a year while Facebook attempts to shift its significantly larger deployment to MySQL.The upgrade is complicated by the scale of the aforementioned modifications Facebook has made to the software to meet its challenges.Each of these web-scale customers, however, continued to put Oracle on notice that their support was not guaranteed into the future.there was "no guarantee" MySQL will be the database of choice at Facebook into the future, he said.We're always evaluating and comparing to the alternatives.those companies willing to switch, MariaDB is promised to be a "drop-in replacement" for MySQL, and has already picked up some big scalps.People worked around their tech's limitations until new versions added it in, instead of migrating to competitors.More commonly they sought support for NoSQL database extensions and the ability to use storage engines other than the Oracle-owned InnoDB.InnoDB is not optimised for all workloads," Callaghan said. "It would be great to make it easier for innovative storage engines to participate in MySQL, to keep MySQL relevant at web scale in the future.