Only someone with a poor understanding of the industry would think that. Mongo is killing it in the enterprise and their partnerships with Teradata et al is only going to cement their position for likely decades to come.
Plus MongoDB's pluggable engine approach will definitely breath some new life into it.
This is exactly right. I can't believe how snide and ignorant a few of the commenters are (except I can because it's the same folks with the same FUD every time). MongoDB isn't standing still and it is getting better and better with every release. Not to mention there are 100's of massive projects running on MongoDB with success.
Something about MongoDB really drives the Postgres community (and certain NoSQL DB fans) nuts and I'm guessing it's that MongoDB is eating their lunch, growing faster than them, is gaining popularity faster, etc. Keep in mind MongoDB is many years younger too and is maturing more quickly now. Plus, developers absolutely love working with it.
It's a tool like any other and still has issues but I'm afraid some here are dancing on its grave well before it has even shown signs of letting up on its growth.
People here have a problem with it because it is a technically poor solution, even among nosql databases. The main problems are:
1. Historically mongodb was distributed with completely unsafe defaults. It was insane to use it with any data you actually cared about. Once you toggle on the safety features most of the vaunted performance goes away.
2. It doesn't actually scale that well despite claims that it does.
The fact that there are better nosql solutions just make people further annoyed. It's basically the cargo cult behaviour of mongodb proponents that people don't like.
1. So then the problem they had was they didn't get the performance they expected since the benchmarks were done with different settings to juice the numbers? There is no upside to arguing this one, Mongo loses one way or the other. Can't play them both.
2. I haven't seen anyone say that Mongo scales in an unlimited fashion. You said that. I think what they might be saying is that it doesn't scale well enough to pay for the trade-offs from using it. If you aren't running a system that can be composed of somewhat-interrelated documents, you're gonna have a bad time.
I like Mongo. And until I really learned about it, I got bitten by the default a few times. Personally I use REPLICA_ACKNOWLEDGED when running in a cluster and FSYNC when writing to a single node.
2 is wrong. Mongos shits all over itself after only a few nodes and moderate traffic. It's balancing is incredibly broken and will kill a small cluster very quickly.
"This just in, Mongo is still in the hype cycle in the slow-moving enterprise space! Obviously after having handily crushed the todo list and twitter clone verticals, they want to expand their influence into mega corporations' dev shops who are tired of dealing with shitty Oracle DBAs. Back to you, Chuck."
Plus MongoDB's pluggable engine approach will definitely breath some new life into it.