The article shows some awesome write performance on Redis:
The benchmarks I’ve done were for applications which is very update intensive with updates being pretty much random single row updates which are hard to batch. With MySQL/Innodb I got server being able to handle some 30.000 updates/sec on 16 core server with replication being able to handle 10.000 updates/sec. This was using about 5 cores so you could probably get 4 MySQL instances on this server and get up to 100K updates/sec with up to 40K updates/sec being able to replicate.
With Redis I got about 3 times more updates/sec – close to 100.000 updates/sec with about 1.5 core being used. I have not tried running multiple instances and I’m not sure the network and TCP stack would scale linearly in this case but anyway we’re speaking about hundreds of thousands of updates/sec.