QuestDB vs Auth0
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
QuestDB is hardening into the time-series engine for regulated capital markets.
QuestDB's recent feed splits cleanly between shipping and storytelling. On the product side, two solid releases — Enterprise 3.3.1 (Parquet tiering, custom CA, column-level access control) and 9.4.2 (query sharing, new aggregates, a hardening pass) — deepen the database for demanding deployments. On the narrative side, a run of engineering deep-dives and capital-markets case studies (One Trading, Aeron) stakes out finance as the beachhead.
The direction is rigor over flash: fewer headline features, more of what regulated, high-throughput users need — data tiering, granular permissions, deterministic replay, benchmark honesty. The blog cadence on JIT internals and benchmarking method builds technical credibility, while the case studies name the target customer (24/7 exchanges, real-time surveillance).
Expect the next releases to keep filling enterprise gaps — retention/tiering controls and access management — and more finance-sector proof points rather than a new headline capability.
Auth0's cadence is all enterprise plumbing: federation, SCIM provisioning, session governance.
Auth0 is shipping steadily against enterprise B2B identity rather than consumer login. The recent run clusters around federated session control (IPSIE session_expiry), bidirectional SCIM provisioning, refresh-token lifecycle management, and directory sync across Okta, OIDC, and Google Workspace connections. Login-UX touches like Google One Tap are the exception, not the theme.
The direction is standards alignment and closing federation gaps, not net-new product categories. Inbound and outbound SCIM, IPSIE claim support, and granular refresh-token endpoints all point at Auth0 becoming the control plane for enterprise provisioning and session lifetime, the surface where Okta and WorkOS set the bar.
Expect more IPSIE profile coverage and continued SCIM/Event Streams expansion, with the outbound provisioning template a likely candidate to graduate from Early Access to GA.
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