Marc Linster

Technical Fellow and advisor

Marc Linster, Ph.D., is a Technical Fellow and advisor at EDBMarc is committed to EDB being an accelerator to providing architectural “know how” to help customers take advantage of Postgres without significant risk and cost. Marc believes that although new customer adoption of open source is easier than the experience of purchasing proprietary options, tools are still incredibly important, and EDB’s professional services practices provides them. Prior to his current role, Marc served as EDB's Chief Technology Officer.

Marc has an extensive background in engineering, technology and logistics with 20 years of management experience. He holds a Ph.D. (Dr. rer. nat) in Computer Sciences from the University of Kaiserslautern in Germany. Before joining EDB, Marc spent four years at Polycom, the leading maker of video communications equipment, where most recently he was a Senior Director, Engineering for Cloud and Hosted Solutions. Before Polycom, Marc was Co-founder and President of TriPoint Interactive, a global supply chain consulting and systems integration company. He spent six years at Avicon Group, first as CTO and then as Vice President of Operations. Marc is an avid equestrian.

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Explore How GDPR Impacts a DBA On May 25, 2018, the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) will take effect, and it will impact the way your organization collects and manages customer data in Europe. GDPR effectively replaces the data protection directive 9546EC, and is not just applicable to companies in the EU, but to any company offering goods or services in the EU. GDPR focuses on...
EnterpriseDB (EDB) is focused on meeting Section 508 requirements and is planning to meet the key requirements of WCAG 2.0 at the A and AA levels, to the degree that those requirements are applicable to web-based business applications.
To our valued EDB Postgres subscribers: By now, you have likely heard the recent news of the Meltdown and Spectre vulnerabilities. Almost every computing system — desktops, laptops, smartphones, and cloud servers — is affected by Spectre. Meltdown appears to be specific to chips made by Intel. Although such exploits are not directly related to EDB Postgres, we seek to be proactive by informing you...
Business Transformation
Virtual machines are by far the most prevalent deployment model for data centers – close to 99%.
Digital transformation has officially become the key to meeting modern customer expectations. Only two years ago, Don Butler, Executive Director of Connected Vehicle and Services at Ford, famously said, " We need to adopt more and more of a mindset of a software or services company.” And today, there is not a car manufacturer that is not actively trying to differentiate their brand based on the...
Data now comes in a wide variety of formats, giving rise to more heterogeneous data collections, often resulting from a commonly employed strategy of choosing the data management solution best suited for the data type and application demands. Selecting the right “horse for the course” approach results in a phenomenon known as polyglot persistence - data assets stored in multiple incongruent...
EDB Labs
Postgres introduced JSON and JSONB in versions 9.3 and 9.4, respectively, with JSONB (Binary Javascript Object Notation) being the canonical form of JSON, stored as binary objects with improved compression and more capabilities.
EDB Labs
IBM recently announced RapidBuild, a reseller channel program that enables organizations to adopt trending technologies like cloud, big data and mobility—quickly and efficiently—with the help of global technology integrators.​
A recent blog post, MongoDB 3.2: Now Powered by PostgreSQL, contained revelations that MongoDB’s newest release, MongoDB 3.2, leverages Postgres to power its new BI connector, designed to work with SQL-compliant data analysis tools. However unlikely, it appears the biggest name in NoSQL has come to realize the tremendous power of Postgres, the world’s most advanced relational database. The...
EDB Labs
Oracle’s security chief seems pretty peeved over the prospect of someone other than the company’s own computer scientists finding a vulnerability.