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Based on our record, Amazon Neptune seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 11 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
The key difference lies in the retrieval mechanism. Vector databases focus on semantic similarity by comparing numerical embeddings, while graph databases emphasize relations between entities. Two solutions for graph databases are Neptune from Amazon and Neo4j. In a case where you need a solution that can accommodate both vector and graph, Weaviate fits the bill. - Source: dev.to / 7 days ago
This technical example was built upon an AWS AI service suite to test its capabilities, and it was pretty impressive, with minimal learning curve for the AI enthusiast. This example leverages Neptune as the graph database, Bedrock’s Claude v3 for our GenAI model and LLM, along with out-of-the-box security notebooks, to populate the data. This coupled with excellent docs and some tinkering helped wire the example... - Source: dev.to / about 1 year ago
Graph databases are designed to store and process highly connected data, such as social networks, recommendation engines, and fraud detection systems. AWS offers a fully managed graph database service called Amazon Neptune that can handle graph data at scale. - Source: dev.to / over 1 year ago
My understanding is that a shard is the full set of services that are needed to support at least one game server, and so it isn't a shard that crashes, it's (usually) a "dynamic" game server (DGS) ( which there's currently only one of per shard until they build out the ~~replication layer~~ (Atlas service? https://sc-server-meshing.info/), so it feels an awful lot like the whole shard crashed )... But the DGS... Source: almost 2 years ago
I know an alternative to regular SQL relational and noSQL databases is graph databases like Neo4j and Amazon Neptune. I don't know if it's relevant to you but you might want to check out https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neo4j or https://aws.amazon.com/neptune/. Source: almost 2 years ago
neo4j - Meet Neo4j: The graph database platform powering today's mission-critical enterprise applications, including artificial intelligence, fraud detection and recommendations.
ArangoDB - A distributed open-source database with a flexible data model for documents, graphs, and key-values.
JanusGraph - JanusGraph is a scalable graph database optimized for storing and querying graphs.
Azure Cosmos DB - NoSQL JSON database for rapid, iterative app development.
Apache TinkerPop - Apache TinkerPop is a graph computing framework for both graph databases (OLTP) and graph analytic systems (OLAP).
OrientDB - OrientDB - The World's First Distributed Multi-Model NoSQL Database with a Graph Database Engine.