> Yes, marketing claims are BS. If this was a reason to not use something, we'd have to stop using pretty much every other commercial piece of software we have.
Which is what I at least have indeed opted to do; I avoid commercial software like the plague for this very reason, using it only when there isn't an alternative (like when it's a legacy system that has to be interfaced with). There are plenty of free software projects that don't make outrageous marketing claims and - therefore - aren't nearly as susceptible to disappointment and wasted money.
Aerospike's claims border on the realm of false advertising (if they don't actually classify as false advertising, which is a big "if"; the claim of 100% uptime is dubious at best and more likely to be an outright-malicious lie). Why should they get my money?
Which is what I at least have indeed opted to do; I avoid commercial software like the plague for this very reason, using it only when there isn't an alternative (like when it's a legacy system that has to be interfaced with). There are plenty of free software projects that don't make outrageous marketing claims and - therefore - aren't nearly as susceptible to disappointment and wasted money.
Aerospike's claims border on the realm of false advertising (if they don't actually classify as false advertising, which is a big "if"; the claim of 100% uptime is dubious at best and more likely to be an outright-malicious lie). Why should they get my money?