*** 288,297 **** -- Are you calling Oracle 'a bloated piece of software'?. LOL. I would love to see a comparison of Oracle and SQLite (latest stable or bleeding edge SQLite version Vs Oracle 10g). I would love it. [This comparison idea is as valid as comparing a novel to a short story.] Anyway, SQLite seems a lil' database ! engine for lil' works. Sorry, not enough for me :). -- Why would anyone compare Oracle to sqlite other than to say "can you add support for this Oracle syntax to make migration between them easier"? *: Up to this moment I thought that Postgree was smallest possible free DB engine (since MySQL is *NOT* free), so if you are looking for something to distribute along with your application, SQLite seem ! to win against 10g, MySQL, Postgree, or whatever (by Makc). - Just to be awkward, what about berkelydb etc? And when you say free you mean free of restrictions don't you (rather than Free software)? I wonder how useful these "remarks" are... --- 288,301 ---- -- Are you calling Oracle 'a bloated piece of software'?. LOL. I would love to see a comparison of Oracle and SQLite (latest stable or bleeding edge SQLite version Vs Oracle 10g). I would love it. [This comparison idea is as valid as comparing a novel to a short story.] Anyway, SQLite seems a lil' database ! engine for lil' works. Sorry, not enough for me :). -- Why would anyone compare Oracle to sqlite other than to say "can you add support for this Oracle syntax to make migration between them easier"? -- Someone might ! mistakenly compare Oracle ! to SQLite because they fail to comprehend that the two products solve ! very different problems. *: Up to this moment I thought that Postgree was smallest possible free DB engine (since MySQL is *NOT* free), so if you are looking for something to distribute along with your application, SQLite seem ! to win against 10g, MySQL, Postgree, or whatever (by Makc). - Just to be awkward, what about berkelydb etc? And when you say free you mean free of restrictions don't you (rather than Free software)? -- Berkeley DB does ! not include SQL support. I wonder how useful these "remarks" are...