In the clouds with Amazon’s SimpleDB

Posted by: Andrew Glover on 06/17/2010

development 2.0As part of the Amazon Web Services family, Amazon’s SimpleDB is a massively scalable and reliable key/value datastore, which is exposed via a web interface and can be accessed using any language you’d like — from Java to Ruby to Perl to C#. In fact, Amazon has recently released a standardized SDK for both the .NET and Java platforms.

Check out IBM DeveloperWorks’ newest article entitled “Cloud storage with Amazon’s SimpleDB, Part 1” — in this article, you’ll see firsthand how to leverage Amazon’s Java SDK to work with SimpleDB. In fact, this is the first of two articles exploring SimpleDB’s unique approach to schemaless data storage, including a demonstration of one of the datastore’s most unusual features: lexicographic searching.

Stay tuned for part 2, where I’ll cover using JPA to work with SimpleDB. Until then, happy reading!

Looking to spin up Continuous Integration quickly? Check out www.ciinabox.com.


be the first to rate this blog

About Andrew Glover

Andrew Glover

Andrew is the founder of the easyb BDD framework and the co-author of Addison Wesley's "Continuous Integration", Manning's "Groovy in Action" and "Java Testing Patterns". He is an author for multiple online publications including IBM's developerWorks and Oreilly's ONJava and ONLamp portals. He actively blogs about software at thediscoblog.com.

More About Andrew »

NFJS, the Magazine

August Issue Now Available
  • Google Your Persistent Domain Model
    by John Griffin
  • Get Cooking in the Cloud with Chef, Part 2
    by Michael Nygard
  • Making Java Bearable with Guava
    by Daniel Hinojosa
  • HTML 5 Update
    by Brian Sletten
Learn More »