MySQL Prepares To Go Public 150
prostoalex writes "MySQL CEO Marten Mickos told Computer Business Review the company plans to go public: 'Now entering its twelfth year, the company has built up just less than 10,000 paying customers, and an installed base estimated to be close to 10 million... When it does go public, MySQL will be one of only a handful of open source vendors to do so. Red Hat, VA Linux (now VA Software), and Caldera (now SCO Group) led the way in 1999 and 2000...'"
two out of 3 aint bad (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, as long as Darl McBride doesn't get his hands on the company they should be ok.
MySQL AB is a proud partner with Scox (Score:2)
amen (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:amen (Score:5, Interesting)
Going public means that the companies primary goal becomes to please the stockholders rather than employees and customers. It's nice that the folks who started it up usually get rich, but it doesn't tend to do good things for anyone else.
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What makes stockholders happy?
Rising stock prices.
How do companies like Red Hat make their revenue?
Maintenance subscriptions.
If customers are unhappy they will stop subscribing to maintenance.
If customers stop their subscriptions, Red Hat's revenue declines as do
their stock price. This makes stock holders unhappy.
So, the
Ramen (Score:5, Insightful)
If you would buy stock in a somewhat anonymous company, would you go and investigate what their business practices are like? Do you care about their customer service? I appreciate that there are exceptions, but most likely you won't. Yes, there are people who invest in companies that they know and care about (sports clubs come to mind,) but the majority of investors invest for a profit. If a company can turn a profit sooner rather than later, they will go for it. Most investors won't care about the database, the open sourciness, the service, the customers or anything else, but they'll care about the numbers on the yearly report. There is linkage, but if it's not apparent, if it's not 1-1 related, there won't be much interest.
(From here: http://www.mathworks.com/company/aboutus/mission_
I think that is very well said, and I think it's something that doesn't go over well for public companies. MathWorks is still privately held.
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There are many different types of stockholder and although I agree going public inevitably opens up the company to the ones just looking for short term gain, its erroneous to think all stockholders think that way (many of the most savvy investors realise investing means potential
Re:Ramen (Score:4, Informative)
For example:
Company A floats on the stock market and it share are purchased by Companies B (15%), C (10%), D(20%), E(6%) and a handful of smaller investors (49% total).
When at their AGM Company A wishes to appoint a new director they have to put it out to vote. But each person gets to vote according to the number of shares in Company A that they own. So if the directors of companies B,C,D and E get together in private and decide who they would rather put in charge, there is nothing all the smaller investors can do as even if they all voted the same way they would still only have 49%.
Now the numbers I quote above are a complete exageration but it usually amounts to the same thing in the real world. Its just that the other comanies would be made up of 10 - 20 investment houses (instead of B C D and E) and they would not initially all agree. So they would trade favours for voting the way another company would prefer in return for the same thing happening in reverse when a vote came up they veiwed as more important to their business. The have the opportunity to do this as they are still only 10 - 20 fundmanagers who probably drink at the same bar / club anyway.
Whereas the smaller investors are spread across a much wider geographical location and are much less likely to have the opportunity to meet. They are also less likely to trade favours the same way fundmanagers can as they probably dont own stock in such a wide range of companies so any favours on offer are less likely to be relevant.
This is usually the way things turn out because most of us do not own shares in a company directly, but our pensions and savings are invested on our behalf. In return for investing our money for us, the investment houses and banks get to use the vote that comes with the shares.
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Have you never looked at the track record of a fund before investing in it? I invest for the long term. Who cares if they are up 40% this year if they are down 30% next year?
Let's think about this... (Score:2)
Assume there are two kinds of stockholders. Those who are bad at long term projections, and those who are good at it. Let both start out with equal amount of money. In the short term they do pretty much equally well. But in the long term (by definition) the second group does a lot better. Just to put some numbers to it, let's say that after 5 years, the second group has twice as much money as the first. It could be 10
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Capital isn't the problem. (Score:3, Insightful)
Since you probably won't believe me, I invite you to compare the features of each. Visiting each project's web site is a good place to start. Once you see how much further ahead PostgreSQL is technologically than MySQL, consider how they managed to accomplish that with relatively little capital.
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Are you familiar with MySQL's storage engine concept? It's powerful stuff.
Trolling (Score:2)
(Sorry. Yes, I know that MySQL has all those things now, my point is that pgsql had them ages ago. Also, I'm a happy MySQL user. Also also, phppgadmin is nothing like phpmyadmin. Etc, etc)
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The biggest limitation on community involvement in MySQL is that you have to transfer copyright to MySQL so that they can sell it for profit.
Is that 10,000 customers total over 12 years? (Score:4, Insightful)
What's the average license cost? $40,000?
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$4995 is still a heck of a lot less then a full time DBA.
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Re:Is that 10,000 customers total over 12 years? (Score:4, Insightful)
Um... how does paying for the license get around needing a DBA? It's not exactly an either-or.
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Um... how does paying for the license get around needing a DBA? It's not exactly an either-or.
I'm not the parent poster, but it seems to me that the argument goes along the lines of "if you hire someone expensive to do a job, why not spend a small amount more to allow them to do it properly."
I hate it when I see expensive, skilled employees being forced to use outdated technologies in their tech-sensitive jobs. It seems like such a waste.
10,000 customers? (Score:4, Interesting)
1) They managed to acquire 10,000 customers? Who are these customers, and why would they pay MySQL for a product that's not only free, but has better competitors available for free?
2) 10,000 customers, with 10 MILLION installs? So the odds are 1 in 1,000 that a user of your product would actually pay you anything? Those are TERRIBLE numbers....
Ahgh. Conflict. Partly because I just don't like MySQL - I'm a Postgres user and shrug my shoulders as to why anybody would use something with all the warts of MySQL...
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Re:10,000 customers? (Score:5, Informative)
Thanks for the questions!
The customer count is over several years. Yes, the majority of our users choose not to pay. The current ratio is something like 1 in 1,000. But as you probably know as an open source user, there is great benefit to a project also from the ones who don't pay.
Those who pay do it for the value-add they receive: production support, scheduled binaries with only bug fixes, the monitoring and advisory servce, etc. From a business perspective the great thing is that the ratio of paid to non-paid is changing and our business is steadily growing.
We are proud at MySQL to build something that has great value to the FOSS communities and is a great business at the same time.
Sorry to hear that you don't like MySQL, but great to see that you nevertheless take time to read
Marten Mickos, CEO, MySQL AB
Re:10,000 customers? (Score:5, Interesting)
2) fix Unicode. UTF8?
3) How about stored procedures/functions with the same name, but different # of parameters? Works great in postgres.
4) Character truncation when inserting into char fields. (maybe this is fixed now? Last version I used was 5, just before it went GA)
5) Real standard TIMESTAMP data types.
6) Get rid of myisam and make InnoDB the standard. MyISAM is a joke.
Of these, 1-2 are very serious issues which will prevent me from working with it. 3-4 make my life more difficult, but I can get around them. 5-6 just make it much more of a serious database. Something where if people ask me what database I recommend for a project, I can honestly say 'MySQL!' and not have every other developer in the room give me odds looks (currently I usually say Postgres).
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That said, pgadmin3 is a cut above MySQL Administrator. But it's all open-source, so there's always room for improvement
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yet in the real world it seems to be working just fine.
And let's pick a not-so-random name from that list; Wikipedia. Remember when they had some major hardware issues, which caused their database servers to crash. The admins announced proudly that almost half of their database servers had come back online without data corruption! They actually believed the fact that half of their MySQL installs had trashed their data due to not supporting ACID properly was a good thing just because not all of their machines had been in the middle of a sensitive operation
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Lets take your favorite database and reproduce the scenario: 6 drives each throw away 8MB of different data randomly selected from the last 500MB of database writes. Repeat with two different battery backed up write caching controller brands with on servers with dual power supplies at a colo with UPS, generator and dual circuits. That's what happened at Wikipedia.
I'm very interested in knowing which database server, running on only a single computer, will recover all except the last transaction in this si
There is more to "databases" than you realize (Score:2)
Durability is a requirement for some applications; a luxury in others, and completely irrelevant in a third group.
Durability comes with a steep price - syncing to disk after every atomic unit of data. This defeats the OS's carefully designed buffering. Most applications do not guarrantee durability. When you type a character into Microsoft Word, it is not synced to disk. When you make a TCP/IP connection, the kernel stores the connection state in RAM and
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Life gets tougher when you find that BOTH power branches are cut off at the same time, on the computer side of the UPS and generator, and you're prohibited from having a UPS in the racks. InnoDB recovers fine from this once the power comes back, subject to only one requirement: the disk drives must not lie about having put the data on the disk surface. If they do lie, life becomes more interesting, though I'll probably
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Try sqlyog. It's free and it kicks the ass of pgadmin any day.
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1) An admin utility (no, phpmyadmin doesn't count for crap) that doesn't suck. Please, just take pgadmin and make it connect to mysql. PLEASE. MySQL Administrator and MySQL Query Browser work very poorly.
HeidiSQL [heidisql.org]. it's sexy.
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Re:10,000 customers? (Score:5, Funny)
Nope, just keep doing what you do best...
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In other words, if you have a d
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I use different table types in MySQL for different features and different situations. Website guestbooks and hit counters are perfectly well handled by MyISAM, most other data by InnoDB tables.
As
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for about 7 years now. The large ones I got rid of because it just took too much baby sitting to
keep the things up and running. vacuum for one thing takes forever to run, often fails requiring me to dump and reload, locks everyone out while it is running etc. I love the feature set of it but
down time to vacuum a table to restore performance in a 24x7 operation just don't cut it.
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What are the limitations that you've experienced?
Re:10,000 customers? (Score:5, Informative)
I don't like that MySQL does not keep my data safely and securely out of the box. Some examples:
I can't take MySQL seriously until this changes. I understand that you have backward compatibility concerns, but that's life - you pay a price for the poor decisions you've made in the past. You might have to go through a long deprecation period before you can get rid of these knobs. At the very least, don't have them flipped this way unless I start mysqld with the --treat-my-data-as-garbage command-line option.
If you fix this fundamental problem, I'll be impressed. I may not use your product, but I will stop laughing at it.
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So in total, all you're complaining about is settings you can actually change easily, either in my.cnf or in the server command line. Maybe I'm missing your point, but what exactly is it?
After all, *some* setup has to be the default, and you can't just dismiss MySQL because its defa
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Also, the fact that a table can behave differently depending on the storage engine is quite worrisome. If a storage engine doesn't support a const
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Why isn't the parser smart enough to do that automatically when it runs into REFERENCES in a column definition?
You're starting to leave an impression with me :-) (Score:2)
I'm an avid MySQL user. I too don't consider MySQL or any other classic RDBMS the cream of databases concepts, allthough the SAP DB/MaxDB thing and the attempt to make it compatible with MySQL SQL dialect did get my attention.
The prime reason why I'm using MySQL on a daily basis is that a
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I'm probably not your demographic target market. Anyhow, technological inertia makes any switch at this point a non-starter.
However, I will say that based on my various comments herein, you've done a good job providing support for your clientelle.
I wish you the best of luck.
Re:10,000 customers? (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't you feel the burning irony of posting this on Slashdot, one of the more prominent MySQL users?
While you're busy with your tiny holy war, people take MySQL for what it offers and builds useful services and sites with it, among those Google, Yahoo, Digg, Apple...
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I'd bet not; nor would I. I'd imagine that the grandparent poster is merely someone who likes writing applications against a more featureful database.
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Re:10,000 customers? (Score:4, Interesting)
Don't you feel the burning irony of posting this on Slashdot, one of the more prominent MySQL users?
Not at all. You *can* build great things with marginal technologies. It's just harder to do so.
Slashdot doesn't face a number of problems that MySQL would fail them on. Slashdot has a rather simple database schema - complex queries and joins are few to none. They don't rely on 100% ACID compliance. They don't use the database to help enforce data integrity.
So MySQL is sufficient for their needs.
But PostgreSQL matches in *all* these areas, and still manages to offer solid performance on complex queries/joins. It offers robust and mature ACID compliance. It offers excellent integrity constraints for your data.
It's not whether or not you can get something to work with MySQL - just like you can build a house with a dollar-store hammer. But why use the dollar-store hammer if both it and the $20 hammer are available to you for free?
Furthermore, the license behind PostgreSQL is MORE FREE than the one behind MySQL. You can build a commercial, shipping product with PostgreSQL and not be beholden to per-sale fees, as you'd see with MySQL.
So, again I ask.... Why would anybody use something with all the warts of MySQL?
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Furthermore, the license behind PostgreSQL is MORE FREE than the one behind MySQL. You can build a commercial, shipping product with PostgreSQL and not be beholden to per-sale fees, as you'd see with MySQL.
That's just the old BSD vs. GPL discussion, no point in trying again to establish which one is more free. But consider this: If PostgreSQL was LESS FREE in your terms of freedom, it would be the only Oracle compatible open source database by now. As it is, EnterpriseDB, which is PostgreSQL with added Oracle compatibility, is a closed-source, commercial product.
Re:10,000 customers? (Score:5, Funny)
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If you think Postgres is so much better than mySQL (and I'm honestly not debating with you that it isn't) then go start your own open source company around Postgres to provide support services. You should make a fortune and put mySQL to shame.
We'll wait here till you get back.
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They failed [pervasive-postgres.com], but not for the reason you might expect:
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Can you provide links to provide context and support of your statements?
Re:10,000 customers? (Score:5, Interesting)
If you're tossing Wankr 2.1 [parm.net] together in your bedroom then MySQL free, pgsql, or even sqlite is more than enough to meet your needs. If you run a large business that relies on MySQL to actually make some $$, then purchasing support is a rational choice. Especially since TCO is still about an order of magnitude less than competition [oracle.com].
Painful Irony (Score:2)
Anyway, google for 'postgresql support' and you'll find several hits on the first few pages. A few have dorky requirements like buying a license to their rebranded 'distro' of postgresql.
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if modpoints would not expire exactly before i need them... yeah.
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If you're tossing Wankr 2.1 [parm.net] together in your bedroom then MySQL free, pgsql, or even sqlite is more than enough to meet your needs. If you run a large business that relies on MySQL to actually make some $$, then purchasing support is a rational choice. Especially since TCO is still about an order of magnitude less than competition.
I make money with my PostgreSQL database. My small-but-growing business will pass the $1,000,000 gross income mark this year, with over 30% profit margins. My issue her
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See, that's exactly what MySQL support is not. I invite you to go over to mysql.com and have a look at their job offerings, where you can read the qualifications required for a support engineer.
MySQL support (Score:2)
I've never had good IT support for software, except from MySQL. It was still a bit painful to get to the engineer who could actually make the code changes to fix the problems, but it did happen, and the problems were fixed.
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One thing MySQL Support isn't is a typical support operation. If it was, I wouldn't be working there: I'd be at Wikipedia or doing DBA or consulting work instead.
Gl
Re:10,000 customers? (Score:4, Insightful)
Sun Microsystems offers 24x7 PostgreSQL support.
Eat that, pgsql-bugs
I've always found the mailing lists to be great. I'm sorry you didn't have that experience. By the way, pgsql-bugs is not a typical support channel, you'd be better off in pgsql-general or #postgresql if you have support needs. Unless you have an actual bug, of course.
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Your Google foo is pretty weak then. I found that the words PostgreSQL Support brought up a number of companies, some of which (Enterprise DB) seem to have some fairly large clients.
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In Soviet Russia, YOU pay the customers!
(Shit, I just made a Soviet Russia joke. Now I feel dirty....)
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I have many more installs where I don't pay for it.
You said "So the odds are 1 in 1,000 that a user of your product would actually pay you anything? Those are TERRIBLE numbers...."
I say "So you get 1 person in a thousand to pay you for your product, even though it's totally free? Tell me more".
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Would love to switch to Postgres, but I just don't get it. And short of buying a book on it and reading up (paying money) I really don't see postgres becoming as easy to install and use as MySQL.
Not all public companies are worth billions (Score:4, Informative)
Not all public companies are worth as much as GE or WalMart. Vast numbers of public companies exist, and many are only worth a few million. 10k customers paying for support (we all know they need it) is still millions in revenue a year, more then enough to go public without being bogus.
Public != Billions.
Invest or not invest? (Score:2)
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Interesting t
I hope my folks buy this time. (Score:1)
Go mySQL (Score:1)
Cost (Score:2)
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An IPO is an initial offer of stock for sale to the relatively general public -- primary market. Usually an equity syndicate team at one or more investment banks determine the best combination of price and quantity of shares to offer to maximize the capital raised for the company, while still making the value attractive to investors. Besides taking a cut of the capital raised, the banks might also buy some of the shares themselves before/aft
Traditional IPO? (Score:1)
Is it that only a very high-profile company like Google can make that model work?
Bad Idea (Score:2)
The more I learn about how public companies are run, the less I want to work for one. Some reasons:
1) You become subject to the whims of the stock market, and the stock market is not the economy. If you ignore the market at best the shareholders hammer you, at worst the SEC shows up on yor doorstep.
2)What is good for the company may not be good for the markey value. E.g. long term R&D may be cut to meet quarterly earnings estimates.
3) The regulations you labor under may focre your decsion making. E.
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Beware: Anecdotal evidence follows!
A guy I know (now retired) worked as management in both private and public companies over the years. At one privately owned company (a medium-sized business owned by a couple of family members, sales in the millions), the place was severely mis-managed due to the fact that it was private. The problem was that the owner wanted to "do the right thing" which often came
Why I think it's a bad idea (Score:2)
For once (Score:2)
Re:Oracle aquisition (Score:5, Informative)
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I'm just curious - why not postgresql for the small app work? I've been looking at firebird recently and wondering where it fits. TIA.
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However you may be using a GPL'd connector - so you're linking to a GPL library. Not actually new, it's the same for all GPL code.
But I don't understand anyway, why do you expect to get something for free while you don't seem to give away something in return?