Mark Palmer
1 min readMar 5, 2019

--

In terms of the data processed, yes, but the ability to query the future lies in the architectural combination of the registration of long-standing queries which checks for any number of standing future conditions against the same predicate. Those registered “future” queries continually check real-time data, but the combination of real-time and registered queries gives the effect of evaluating any and all future conditions, hence, querying the future.

--

--

Mark Palmer
Mark Palmer

Written by Mark Palmer

Board Advisor for Correlation One, Data Visualization Society, and Talkmap | World Economic Forum Tech Pioneer | Data Science for All Mentor

No responses yet