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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T22:28:31+00:00 2026-05-14T22:28:31+00:00

Right now I’m developing the prototype of a web application that aggregates large number

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Right now I’m developing the prototype of a web application that aggregates large number of text entries from a large number of users. This data must be frequently displayed back and often updated. At the moment I store the content inside a MySQL database and use NHibernate ORM layer to interact with the DB. I’ve got a table defined for users, roles, submissions, tags, notifications and etc. I like this solution because it works well and my code looks nice and sane, but I’m also worried about how MySQL will perform once the size of our database reaches a significant number. I feel that it may struggle performing join operations fast enough.

This has made me think about non-relational database system such as MongoDB, CouchDB, Cassandra or Hadoop. Unfortunately I have no experience with either. I’ve read some good reviews on MongoDB and it looks interesting. I’m happy to spend the time and learn if one turns out to be the way to go. I’d much appreciate any one offering points or issues to consider when going with none relational dbms?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T22:28:32+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 10:28 pm

    The other answers here have focused mainly on the technical aspects, but I think there are important points to be made that focus on the startup company aspect of things:

    • Availabililty of talent. MySQL is very common and you will probably find it easier (and more importantly, cheaper) to find developers for it, compared to the more rarified database systems. This larger developer base will also mean more tutorials, a more active support community, etc.
    • Ease of development. Again, because MySQL is so common, you will find it is the db of choice for a great many systems / services. This common ground may make any external integration a little easier.
    • You are preparing for a situation that may never exist, and is manageable if it does. Very few businesses (nevermind startups) come close to MySQL’s limits, and with all due respect (and I am just guessing here); the likelihood that your startup will ever hit the sort of data throughput to cripple a properly structured, well resourced MySQL db is almost zero.

    Basically, don’t spend your time ( == money) worrying about which db to use, as MySQL can handle a lot of data, is well proven and well supported.

    Going back to the technical side of things… Something that will have a far greater impact on the speed of your app than choice of db, is how efficiently data can be cached. An effective cache can have dramatic effects on reducing db load and speeding up the general responsivness of an app. I would spend your time investigating caching solutions and making sure you are developing your app in such a way that it can make the best use of those solutions.

    FYI, my caching solution of choice is memcached.

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