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Hoodies taking over lab coats

DataQuest

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April 2025

From vector databases to hallucinations, to the purity of open source, to how hyper-personalisation and real-time delights are redefining the afternoon shift of databases – this CTO reorganises a lot of shelves. And in a fun way!

- By Pratima H

Hoodies taking over lab coats

There was a time when libraries smelt of time-travelled oak, vintage ceilings, dog-eared books, dust-draped spines, and mazes of musty rows. There came a time for glass vitrines, travelators around bookshelves, Escher stairs, interlocking planks, floating books, dapper honeycombs and well-lit fluid spaces. The monolith changed into a matrix. Today, both exist. For different kinds of readers. For different moods. Different needs. Even as some question the very relevance of a library in a world smitten with pixels and bits. Also, a world where databases have evolved from racks, rows and rigid columns to modular designs, non-relational fluidity and vectors. Caught between nostalgia and future, between legacy backyards and on-the-fly trays, between rigidity and real-time agility - databases are rearchitecting themselves for the new city called AI. How relevant and well-fitted are these libraries for the data readers of today and tomorrow? No better person to ask that question than a CTO who picks fun analogies over heavy jargon, who simplifies rather than complicates his answers and who cites ‘blueberry yoghurt’ instead of a boiler-plate geeky term to explain exactly how and why we need new-and-improved-and-delicious databases today. Grab your spoon for this interview with Boris Bialek VP and field CTO, MongoDB.

Let's start with the most obvious question first. The AI buzz is everywhere and am sure the database world is feeling the heat too. What happens to databases now? Especially non-relational ones?

MEER VERHALEN VAN DataQuest

DataQuest

DataQuest

Polyglot Persistence- Not just an exotic idea anymore

SQL will continue to serve as the lingua franca but the world of data will speak in graphs, vectors, LLMs too- and relational databases will stay but not in the same chair. Here's why?

time to read

5 mins

January 2026

DataQuest

DataQuest

Bright frogs, Monarch butterflies, Black-yellow bees and industrial automation- same thing?

As counter-intuitive as it may sound- Is automation a stupid loud colour to wear that attracts predators because of bigger attack surfaces or is it strangely-aposematic enough to tell the bad actors - stay away? Specially when security is baked in and bold- and ready for any camouflage? And what happens when Quantum and third-party supply chains make their way into industrial forests? We may not have all the answers but how about a purple-team approach to begin with.

time to read

3 mins

January 2026

DataQuest

DataQuest

How Nagarro bridges the gap between AI ambition and enterprise reality

Nagarro's Viyom Jain explains how ambition meets reality in enterprise AI, and why trust, culture, and human context matter as much as algorithms.

time to read

5 mins

January 2026

DataQuest

DataQuest

Food fraud, shortage and wastage – on the chopping block

Can, and how would, technology (like Blockchain, IoT, AI) help in bringing us food that is transparent, clean-labelled, free of stuff we don't really want and made as per one's own palate? Darshan Krishnamurthy, Co-founder & CTO, Khetika shows us the ingredient-section in detail.

time to read

4 mins

January 2026

DataQuest

DataQuest

AI is not Valyrian. It's the new English.

While it may still be too early for people to say 'Avy jorrāelan' to a technology that is affecting their jobs in more ways than one, it is better if we face our fears with clarity, caution and confidence. How does that advice play out in a function that, itself, decides who works and where?

time to read

6 mins

January 2026

DataQuest

DataQuest

Lou Gerstner, architect of IBM's turnaround, dies at 83

Arvind Krishna, IBM's CEO, confirmed in an official message to employees that Lou Gerstner, IBM's Chairman and CEO from 1993 to 2002, has died. He was 83.

time to read

3 mins

January 2026

DataQuest

DataQuest

India's third tech wave: Tech predictions 2026 through an impact lens

Post-Y2K scale and the 2010s cloud era reshaped Indian tech. In 2026, ΑΙ becomes the third wave, separating hype from outcomes, pivots, and trust.

time to read

4 mins

January 2026

DataQuest

DataQuest

Top Tech Predictions 2026: The Lighthouse View

Spoiler-alert first- there is nothing new or plot-changing that is visible on the 2026 horizon. But a lot of new and big ships would be building pace on the waves that were built last year. And, perhaps, in new directions.

time to read

9 mins

January 2026

DataQuest

DataQuest

Tata Communications' Andrew Winney on why SASE is now non-negotiable

Andrew Winney of Tata Communications explains why perimeter security is broken, how SASE enables Zero Trust at scale, and what CISOs must prioritise next.

time to read

6 mins

January 2026

DataQuest

DataQuest

Tiny AI: The new oxymoron in town? Not really!

So far everything about AI has been BIG! Huge hype, gigantic investments, massive bets and colossal infrastructures. Despite all that, there is talk about Tiny AI. Or shall we say, because of all that.

time to read

7 mins

January 2026

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