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00:01 Now let's look a little bit at who is using MongoDB and how.
00:04 On one hand, it's not that important that it's a popularity contest—
00:07 does it solve your problem, good, use it.
00:09 On the other, MongoDB is different, right,
00:12 it's not a relational database that people have been using for thirty years
00:15 and we call that axiom conversation, I had at the beginning,
00:18 if you are the one adopting MongoDB you have to take this idea
00:21 and present it to the people that run the business,
00:24 to your managers, to the tech team and say
00:27 hey this is a safe thing for us to do, this is a good thing for us to do.
00:30 And so, by looking at the other users of MongoDB,
00:34 how they're using it and how much data and traffic they are passing through it
00:37 can give you some really good support
00:41 like hey look it's working well for these companies,
00:43 and they're way more risk adverse than we are,
00:45 so if they can use it, we can totally use it.
00:47 So, with that in mind, let's go look at who uses MongoDB,
00:51 so they have a whole page who uses MongoDB right here,
00:54 we can flip through and there's a few major ones;
00:56 so we've got MetLife, they're doing some pretty interesting things
01:00 obviously they are a large insurance company
01:02 they have a single view of a hundred million customers
01:05 across 70 systems and they built this whole thing up on Mongo
01:07 and it's 90 days, that's pretty cool.
01:10 Expedia uses it for millions of customers
01:13 while they're looking for travel, that's great.
01:15 Now let's look at some more, you can see the scrollbar, this is actually huge,
01:19 so let's scroll down to find some interesting ones.
01:22 So let's say Royal Bank of Scotland,
01:24 this supports the bank's enterprise data services
01:26 underpinning several core trading systems,
01:29 okay that's intense, right, like if you're debating
01:32 whether or not this can do like you know
01:34 some probably not super intense
01:36 for the majority of the students part of your app,
01:38 if Royal Bank of Scotland is going to make this part of their core trading systems
01:42 that's really putting a lot of faith in it.
01:46 Biotech, they use this to accelerate their drug testing,
01:50 Facebook, they have a whole bunch of interesting things
01:52 that they're doing with Mongo, they ran like a backend as a service of Mongo
01:57 when they acquired Parse, but they're not doing platform stuff like they used to.
02:00 Now let's flip around, let's have a look at say ebay
02:03 they're doing delivering all their media metadata with five nines for liability;
02:07 Barclays, a big bank, so they've replaced
02:10 a whole bunch of relational systems there,
02:13 let's keep going, come down here to our friends in Germany,
02:15 they built a pretty amazing internet of things platform on top of MongoDB,
02:20 come down look the New York Times,
02:23 they basically did all their social sharing activity on top of MongoDB,
02:27 Business Insider, you probably run across Business Insider the website,
02:31 so they've been around since 2009,
02:34 they launched in New York city, and their whole site
02:37 runs on MongoDB, which is pretty awesome.
02:39 Speaking of business, let's look at Forbes,
02:43 they rebuilt their whole cms on top of MongoDb,
02:45 resulting in a jump of 5 to 15 percent in mobile traffic overnight, that's really cool.
02:50 So Carfax, they sell cars online and in person
02:54 so a ton of traffic happening there, that's really cool.
02:57 Cern, I love Cern, these guys at the Large Hadron Colider
03:02 they're using MongoDB to manage the data
03:06 while they're searching for the Higgs Boson
03:10 which I think this probably needs updating
03:12 because as they now have found the Higgs Boson
03:14 and won the Nobel Prize as a part of that.
03:16 Another interesting a long time user of MongoDB is Foursquare;
03:21 so Foursquare is as far as I know more or less entirely powered by MongoDB
03:26 and here you can say it powers the processing storage of all check ins
03:30 with hundreds of thousands of IOPS on MongoDB,
03:34 that's hundreds of thousands of operations, input/ output operations
03:37 per second on MongoDB, which is really, really cool.
03:40 Let's look at Sailthru, so Sailthru is like marketing email campaign company
03:46 and they store 40 terabytes of data in MongoDB across a 120 nodes
03:53 so remember we talked about document databases
03:57 and NoSQL databases in general being good for horizontal scale
04:01 and sharding and partitioning your data;
04:04 120 nodes in your cluster that's pretty intense.
04:07 All right, let's do one more, let's talk about Shutterfly,
04:10 so Shutterfly is like a photo sharing site, pretty cool,
04:15 you can like put your pictures there, sharing with people
04:18 you can get like printed books they were doing that before
04:20 some of the main companies like google were and so on,
04:22 so this is interesting in that they have a bunch of projects,
04:26 on Mongo storing over 20 terabytes of data.
04:29 Square Space, Stripe and on and on it goes, right,
04:33 all of these really cool companies are using MongoDB.
04:37 I guess one more let's look at UnderArmor here.
04:40 So Under Armour is interesting because I haven't seen
04:43 any of the previous examples explicitly calling this out;
04:46 so Under Armor is like an athletic clothing company in the US
04:49 and around the world, and their online shop is powered by MongoDB
04:54 and it does over two billion dollars in sales, so that's pretty awesome.
04:59 All right, so why do we spend all this time talking about who uses MongoDB?
05:02 One, to show you there are a bunch of companies
05:05 being really, really successful with MongoDB
05:07 and that there are different use cases,
05:10 different companies in different areas doing different things,
05:13 we saw like biotech, we saw pharma, here is e-commerce, all sorts of things.
05:18 Oh, EA, I didn't pull up EA but they're using it to power, let's go up here to EA,
05:23 so EA is using this to scale their online games to millions of players;
05:29 so all sorts of really cool and interesting use cases
05:33 that you can use to say hey, we should give this database a try
05:37 because here's a bunch of other people being successful with it.
05:40 This also means that you can rely on Mongo
05:43 because it's taken a serious beating from quite a few different angles
05:47 and use cases, it's not some barely used database
05:50 but it's highly, highly used actually.