@jaimemorganhitchcock6195

Wow! Thank you very much for this video Code to the Moon! Just the two of us at the moment, but my brother and I have huge plans for SurrealDB. We are working on lots of performance improvements, GraphQL integration, and our own key-value storage engine coming in due course. Thank you once again for this video!

@WolvericCatkin

Came for Rust, stayed because the unique abstractions in the design actually managed to make the idea of database structure actually appealing to me... 😹

@d3j4v00

A directional edge connection is the first time I've seen an arrow operator feel appropriate

@DavidRutten

DEFINE, CREATE, RELATE, SELECT ... all six letter commands. I love it.

@wackytheshaggy

Ok, this is insane. I was dreaming of a DB that would do graph connections in trust to move away from neo4j , but this is amazing.  An absolute killer.

@theherk

This looks extremely interesting. I suspect this will grow very quickly.

@keatonhatch6213

Holy crap. If this pans out to what it’s teaching for this could single handedly solve a lot of the  database headaches.

@MikePeiman

Thanks for posting this! I've surveyed the DB landscape wayyy too much and still, this is my first time seeing this database! VERY impressed and intrigued. Also, great job on the overview! Really concise and thorough introduction.

@ambuj.k

These awesome projects like SurrealDB are a result of developers using a language in which they don't have to care about memory and bang their heads when their application segfaults. Awesome work by SurrealDB devs!!

@konstantin-bifert

The content of your channel is real: great video + audio quality + thumbnails + transitions + rhythm and so much more.
Really inspiring!

Thanks for that super fast and amazing tutorial! πŸ™πŸ»

@dabbopabblo

at 9:15 you could of simplified the statement to be SELECT armor:dragon<-wants_to_buy<- FROM players; and then the results will be an array of the player rows that want to buy it instead of being an array of their ids nested in the first result that then need to be extracted and separately queried. This version of the query is shorter and gets the data you need without multiple subsequent queries

@benext1611

This looks really interesting. Having worked for many years with traditional SQL, and having migrated a few years back completely to NoSQL databases for speed and scalability reasons, I'm really curious to see how SurrealDB scales.  If it combines the scalability of NoSQL databases with the ease and familiarity of SQL then could be a very exciting!

@0xccd

Time to start playing with the new boy in the block. Thanks for sharing.

@smdalapo2447

I am brand new to DAW and soft soft - these tutorials are excellent an very helpful to get soone like  up and running. Appreciate

@peterferguson6996

The devs fpr this project should feel proud. Its not easy to create a whole new database architecture, let alone one that leverages the benefits of it predecessors. This will catch on

@flyingsquirrel3271

I'm sure this will become very popular quickly. It seems to be very well thought out and a great fit for a ton of use cases, it's written in Rust which is always a plus and it has super consistent and slick looking branding and all that. The logo looks so cool, I'm tempted to use surreal just so I have a reason for putting that sticker on my laptop :-P

@UliTroyo

What a cool demo! It really showcases SurrealDB's simplicity and usability. Thanks!

@TommiTuura

Those multi-cluster stuffs that are in "future" on surrealdb's roadmap are even more ambitious. If they can deliver on those and survive Jepsen, I'll tip off every hat to them!

@chamber3593

You guys are great and SurrealDB genuinely feels interesting. Can't wait to play with it.

@vervedonk

This is an amazing video on introduction to it's concept, beautiful.