What is NoSQL Database?

NoSQL database software provides the tools to store, capture and retrieve of big data through the use of non tabular databases. Compare and read user reviews of the best NoSQL Database currently available using the table below. This list is updated regularly.

  • 1
    MongoDB Atlas
    The most innovative cloud database service on the market, with unmatched data distribution and mobility across AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud, built-in automation for resource and workload optimization, and so much more. MongoDB Atlas is the global cloud database service for modern applications. Deploy fully managed MongoDB across AWS, Google Cloud, and Azure with best-in-class automation and proven practices that guarantee availability, scalability, and compliance with the most demanding data security and privacy standards. The best way to deploy, run, and scale MongoDB in the cloud. MongoDB Atlas offers built-in security controls for all your data. Enable enterprise-grade features to integrate with your existing security protocols and compliance standards. With MongoDB Atlas, your data is protected with preconfigured security features for authentication, authorization, encryption, and more.
    Starting Price: $0.08/hour
  • 2
    Qubole

    Qubole

    Qubole

    Qubole is a simple, open, and secure Data Lake Platform for machine learning, streaming, and ad-hoc analytics. Our platform provides end-to-end services that reduce the time and effort required to run Data pipelines, Streaming Analytics, and Machine Learning workloads on any cloud. No other platform offers the openness and data workload flexibility of Qubole while lowering cloud data lake costs by over 50 percent. Qubole delivers faster access to petabytes of secure, reliable and trusted datasets of structured and unstructured data for Analytics and Machine Learning. Users conduct ETL, analytics, and AI/ML workloads efficiently in end-to-end fashion across best-of-breed open source engines, multiple formats, libraries, and languages adapted to data volume, variety, SLAs and organizational policies.
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