Ellen Messmer, NetworkWorld
Jun 30, 2014
http://www.networkworld.com/article/2449011/security/157851-new-products-of-the-week-06-30-14.html
Visit the link above to view the full slideshow. Driven 1.0 is featured on slide #25.
Ellen Messmer, NetworkWorld
Jun 30, 2014
http://www.networkworld.com/article/2449011/security/157851-new-products-of-the-week-06-30-14.html
Visit the link above to view the full slideshow. Driven 1.0 is featured on slide #25.
Staff, Information Management
Jun 27, 2014
http://www.information-management.com/news/tableau-cambridge-semantics-pentaho-others-introduce-new-products-10025782-1
ASG Software Solutions launched version 8.0 of its CloudFactory platform. CloudFactory 8.0 provides one tool to manage all of an organization’s IT environments – from the mainframe to the cloud, and everything in between – solving efficiency, productivity, security and compliance issues.
BlazeMeter, provider of the JMeter-based performance testing cloud, announced FollowMe, scriptless performance testing for its cloud-based platform. FollowMe speeds up and simplifies performance testing by eliminating complex, costly and time-consuming scripting procedures. Developers can run large-scale performance tests of their API, mobile app, mobile website or Web app in real-time by clicking through their product, with virtual users following their every move to simulate load.
Cambridge Semantics, a provider of smart data solutions driven by semantic Web technology, announced the launch of its Anzo Smart Data Integration (ASDI) software to help enterprises rapidly understand and integrate information assets. ASDI uses common, conceptual business models to automate traditional data integration tasks, eliminating the need for hand-coding and direct data exchanges between teams.
Concurrent, Inc., an enterprise data application platform company, announced the general availability of Driven, an application performance management product for data-centric applications. Driven is purpose-built to address the pain points of enterprise application development and application performance management to organizations that need to deliver operational excellence, enabling businesses to make the most from their data.
Compuware Corporation, a technology performance company delivering application performance management, announced new mobile capabilities across the Compuware APMaaS platform that further extends its functionality in mobile performance and user experience management. This new release is a unified APM solution that offers an end-to-end view of how apps are being used, how they are performing as seen from the users and what code improvements can help improve satisfaction and conversion.
DataNumen Inc., a provider of data recovery software technologies, released version 4.5 of DataNumen Exchange Recovery, a recovery tool for Microsoft Exchange offline storage (.OST) files. DataNumen Exchange Recovery makes it easy to recover as much data as possible and save it in standard Outlook files. Improvements in version 4.5 include support for Outlook 2013 OST files.
GoodData announced its agile data warehousing service to power greater performance, scalability and flexibility within its Open Analytics Platform. The new service leverages a columnar database and fully integrated governance and integration processes to support end-to-end automation for customers.
MEGA introduced HOPEX Regulatory Compliance to help companies meet the increasing volume of compliance requirements. The solution will also aid organizations in reducing risks and streamlining compliance activities to meet governance challenges.
Pentaho Corporation announced the general availability of version 5.1 of its business analytics and data integration platform, offering companies enhanced capabilities to scale up their big data operations. Building upon the foundation of enterprise big data blueprints, the Pentaho 5.1 platform enables companies large or small to take full advantage of big data without having to endure a lengthy, specialized process.
Tableau Software announced the general availability of Tableau 8.2, an update that brings Tableau to Mac users around the world and adds a feature to help people tell stories with their data. With Tableau 8.2, Mac users will have a fully featured analytics application that lets them ask questions of their data. Story Points will allow everyone to create interactive, data-driven stories that they can share with their organizations, networks and the world.
TIBCO announced LogLogic 5.5, the newest version of its log management platform for machine data management, visual analytics and compliance. LogLogic 5.5 boosts operational intelligence capabilities and enables enterprises and managed security service providers to increase productivity by using machine data management to act and respond more efficiently when identifying issues related to compliance, IT operations and security.
Treasure Data, a cloud-based, managed service provider for big data, announced a new offering empowering advertising technology companies to collect, store and analyze enormous data volumes in near-real-time, without operating a costly infrastructure. Treasure Data’s cloud-based, managed service has been transformational for publishers, advertisers and marketplaces. It offers fast, easy and cost-effective capabilities for data processing at massive scales.
Unisys Corporation announced the second generation of its Forward! by Unisys enterprise computing platform. New features include support for the new Intel Xeon Processor E7 v2 Family and capabilities that expand the power and flexibility of the Forward! platform for a range of mission-critical applications.
Zendesk, Inc. launched Insights, its next-generation analytics tool for organizations to measure and visualize the impact of their customer service interactions managed through its cloud-based customer service platform. Zendesk built Insights to deliver easy-to-understand visualizations and reports that quickly allow any organization to measure the effectiveness of their customer support, benchmark themselves against industry peers and better understand their customers.
Sign-up here: http://meetu.ps/2qgDXs
When:
Tuesday, July 22, 2014
6:30 PM
Where:
Rackspace
620 Folsom Street, Suite 100
San Francisco, CA
What:
Big Data is moving to the next level of maturity and it’s all about the applications. Join Supreet Oberoi, one of the minds behind Cascading, the most widely used and deployed development framework for building Big Data applications, as we discuss how Cascading can enable developers to accelerate the time to market for their data applications, from development to production. In this session, Supreet will introduce how to easily and reliably develop, test, and scale your data applications and then deploy them on Hadoop. He will also explain the growth behind Cascading and talk about Cascading’s future with Spark.
Speaker’s bio:
Supreet Oberoi is the Vice President of Field Engineering atConcurrent Inc. Prior to that, as the Director of Big Data application infrastructure for American Express, he led the development of use cases for fraud, operational risk, marketing and privacy on the Big Data platforms. Holder of multiple patents in data engineering, Supreet has had leadership roles at Real-Time Innovations, Oracle and Microsoft. He has an MS in Computer Sciences from Stanford University, and a BS with Highest Honors from University of Texas at Austin.
Schedule:
6:30 – 7:00pm Social (food + drinks served)
7:00 – 8:00pm Talk (including Q&A)
8:00 – 8:30pm Social
Special thanks to the DevBrill MeetUp Group for arranging!
http://www.meetup.com/DevBrill-Developers-Meetup-SF-Bay-Area/
Andrew Brust, GigaOM
Jun 25, 2014
http://research.gigaom.com/2014/06/data-analytics-world-gets-new-releases-new-partnerships-en-masse
During my week in San Francisco for the Gigaom Structure conference last week, and continuing the early part of this week, a slew of important announcements were made in the Big Data and analytics space. While the volume of announcements would normally be a lot to cover, we can save some time by breaking the announcements into groups: data visualization favorites on new platforms; support for Hadoop 2.0 and YARN; new products; as well as alliances and acquisitions.
New platforms
On the new platforms front, Tableau Desktop and Tableau Public, which had previously been available only for Windows PCs, are now available for the Mac; and Roambi, a mobile data visualization platform, which had been iOS-exclusive, will available on Android starting next month.
Tableau’s release comes as part of a new version (8.2) of the venerable data discovery package, so Windows users benefit too, and Tableau achieves parity on both platforms. Tableau 8.2 sports a new “Story Points” facility which mashes up presentation and dashboard features, and also includes a redesigned data connection experience, updated maps and improvements to Tableau Server.
Roambi Analytics for Android will support the Card, Catalist, Layers and Superlist views, with support for additional visualizations, and the Roambi Flow publishing product, to be added “throughout the remainder of the year.”
Hadoop 2.0 gains adoption
Two different new version releases, announced this past week, add support for Hadoop 2.0 and YARN, Hadoop’s cluster management layer that decouples from the high-overhead MapReduce processing algorithm.
Pentaho announced version 5.1 of its Business Analytics platform, which includes full support for YARN. It also includes support for in-place processing of data with MongoDB, and a new Data Science Pack that provides interfaces from Pentaho Data Integration to the R programming language, and to Weka, Pentaho’s open source data mining engine.
RainStor, which has for some time provided advanced data compression for the Hadoop Distributed File System (HDFS), has released a new Archive Application, part of its RainStor 6 release, that is fully YARN-compatible. This application works much faster than its predecessor, since it no longer needs to use MapReduce under the covers.
New products
There are two news items in the new products arena. The first is the release of “Driven” an application performance management (APM) tool geared specifically to Big Data applications, from Concurrent. Concurrent is best known for its Cascading product, which provides a developer platform for building such Big Data applications, be they on a single server node or an entire Hadoop cluster.
The other announcement here is, I must admit, not exactly around a new product. It concerns, Aerospike, a previously proprietary in-memory NoSQL database, that the company announced is now available in open source format. While Aerospike will not (at least not yet) be rolled out as an Apache Software Foundation project, it will nonetheless be an Apache-licensed project, which may put it on par with NoSQL databases like MongoDB, Cassandra and HBase.
New unions
Closing out this week’s array of industry developments are an acquisition and two partnerships. Specifically, rising predictive analytics star RapidMiner has acquired Budapest-based Radoop; Splunk has formed a partnership with Syncsort; and GigaSpaces has announced it’s teaming up with SanDisk.
RapidMiner makes an eponymous open source data mining/machine learning package that is visually-oriented, eliminating the need for complex programming to build predictive data models. Radoop also makes an eponymous product, focused on Hadoop analytics functionality, that is also visually-oriented and is “powered by” RapidMiner itself, making the union quite logical.
What’s also logical is performing what Splunk calls “operational intelligence” on top of mainframe machine data data. Splunk’s alliance with Syncsort does just that, specifically providing for collection and analysis of data from IBM z/OS systems.
Finally, GigaSpaces Technologies, the company behind an in-memory data grid called XAP, has announced a partnership with major flash memory player SanDisk, based around the latter’s ZetaScale software. The result is a new version of the product: XAP MemoryXtend, which allows XAP to use flash-based SSD storage at what the company calls “near the speed of DRAM memory.” This allows for the processing of larger datasets, at a lower cost basis than purely DRAM-based systems.
New resolve
Taken together, this past week’s sprawl of announcements show that analytics products are moving solidly across platforms, beyond MapReduce, in-memory, and into the predictive analytics arena. Why so much activity in one fine week in June? Maybe to get ready for a slower summer…but I doubt we’ll have one.
Driven Delivers Operational Visibility and Control for Enterprise Big Data Applications to Reach Production Faster
SAN FRANCISCO – June 24, 2014 – Concurrent, Inc., the enterprise data application platform company, today announced the general availability of Driven, the industry’s first application performance management product for data-centric applications. Driven is purpose-built to address the pain points of enterprise application development and application performance management to organizations who need to deliver operational excellence, enabling businesses to make the most from their data.
Unveiled in early February as a beta, Driven gives developers and operators unmatched visibility into their data applications in real-time, so that they can isolate, manage and resolve problems immediately to accelerate application development. The end results are stable, highly reliable applications that enterprises can depend on to deliver against their data strategies. Driven is designed to give developers and operators a 10x boost in productivity across the application lifecycle.
With Driven, enterprises can now gain comprehensive visibility across their data-centric applications and have the ability to:
Driven is a free service on cascading.io and is licensable for production use as an annual subscription. Driven is easily enabled through a plugin, which seamlessly collects runtime data directly from any Cascading application. Cascading is the platform of choice for the development and deployment of Big Data applications with more than 150,000 monthly downloads and 7,000 deployments. Together, Cascading and Driven deliver a one-two punch to knock out the complexity in Big Data application development. To request a quote for a production license, please contact sales@concurrentinc.com.
Supporting Quotes
“Driven’s priorities, capabilities and feature sets are squarely focused on delivering value to our users, so that they can deliver their projects to production faster and easier. With the availability of Driven, developers now have unmatched visibility across all Cascading applications, including those built with Cascading dynamic programming languages, such as Scalding, Cascalog, Lingual and Pattern. Driven is a remarkable step forward in delivering on the full promise of connecting businesses with their data.”
-Chris Wensel, founder and CTO, Concurrent, Inc.
Supporting Resources
About Concurrent, Inc.
Concurrent, Inc. is the leader in Big Data application infrastructure, delivering products that help enterprises create, deploy, run and manage data applications at scale. The company’s flagship enterprise solution, Driven, was designed to accelerate the development and management of enterprise data applications. Concurrent is the team behind Cascading, the most widely deployed technology for data applications with more than 150,000 user downloads a month. Used by thousands of businesses including eBay, Etsy, The Climate Corp and Twitter, Cascading is the de facto standard in open source application infrastructure technology. Concurrent is headquartered in San Francisco and online at http://concurrentinc.com.
###
Media Contact
Danielle Salvato-Earl
Kulesa Faul for Concurrent, Inc.
(650) 922-7287
concurrent@kulesafaul.com
Jeff Bertolucci, Information Week
Jun 18, 2014
http://www.informationweek.com/big-data/hardware-architectures/10-more-powerful-facts-about-big-data–/d/d-id/1278598
I know what you Hadoop-ed last summer:
Welcome to big data facts, the sequel. When we recently posted a slideshow examining the latest trends in big data, readers responded in a big way. You want more facts and context on big data — though the term itself defies an easy definition and even makes some people groan. It’s certainly more than Hadoop, although the open source software framework with the cute elephant mascot is the dominant big data platform to date. And its meaning will only evolve as billions of Internet-enabled sensors, appliances, and other devices begin sharing data in the coming years.
How do you define big data? And what does it mean to your organization? Consider these divergent observations from industry leaders:
Scott Schlesinger, senior VP at Capgemini, December 2013: “There’s no doubt that companies’ pursuits of big data initiatives have the best intentions to improve operational decision making across the enterprise. That being said, companies shouldn’t get stuck on the term ‘big data.’ The true initiative and what they ultimately need to be concerned with is how they’re implementing better data management practices that account for the variety and complexity of the data being acquired for analysis.”
Gary Nakamura, CEO of Concurrent, December 2013: “More Hadoop projects will be swept under the rug as businesses devote major resources to their big data projects before doing their due diligence, which results in a costly, disillusioning project failure.”
Joel Young, chief technical officer of Digi International, on companies that want to implement a big data strategy — but aren’t sure why (March 2014): “It’s like, okay, let’s back up here. What is the biggest problem you have? Why do you want to collect all this data? What kind of insight are you looking for? Just saying ‘insight’ and ‘innovation’ is a wonderful thing, but first and foremost you need to focus.”
Kathy Reece, business analytics leader at IBM Global Business Services, commenting on findings from a November 2013 IBM survey: “It’s interesting that only one quarter of CEOs or COOs are the lead advocates for the use of analytic insights, even though they realize that innovation and revenue growth is the chief value of applying analytics. So we need to get more senior leadership advocating for the use of analytics.”
Chris Taylor, marketing director for TIBCO, March 2013: “There’s been a perception that if you get enough data, you can find something in it that’s meaningful. I think that’s a big mistake. The answer might be not big data at all, but small data.”
Which of these statements do you agree with? Let us know in the comments section.
Now explore our stats-filled look at big data trends and a few big questions. Which sports league is trailing the big data race? How will Internet of Things change the landscape? And is data quality getting any better? Dig in.
Jeff Bertolucci, InformationWeek
Jun 18, 2014
http://www.informationweek.com/big-data/hardware-architectures/10-more-powerful-facts-about-big-data–/d/d-id/1278598
I know what you Hadoop-ed last summer:
Welcome to big data facts, the sequel. When we recently posted a slideshow examining the latest trends in big data, readers responded in a big way. You want more facts and context on big data — though the term itself defies an easy definition and even makes some people groan. It’s certainly more than Hadoop, although the open source software framework with the cute elephant mascot is the dominant big data platform to date. And its meaning will only evolve as billions of Internet-enabled sensors, appliances, and other devices begin sharing data in the coming years.
How do you define big data? And what does it mean to your organization? Consider these divergent observations from industry leaders:
Scott Schlesinger, senior VP at Capgemini, December 2013: “There’s no doubt that companies’ pursuits of big data initiatives have the best intentions to improve operational decision making across the enterprise. That being said, companies shouldn’t get stuck on the term ‘big data.’ The true initiative and what they ultimately need to be concerned with is how they’re implementing better data management practices that account for the variety and complexity of the data being acquired for analysis.”
Gary Nakamura, CEO of Concurrent, December 2013: “More Hadoop projects will be swept under the rug as businesses devote major resources to their big data projects before doing their due diligence, which results in a costly, disillusioning project failure.”
Joel Young, chief technical officer of Digi International, on companies that want to implement a big data strategy — but aren’t sure why (March 2014): “It’s like, okay, let’s back up here. What is the biggest problem you have? Why do you want to collect all this data? What kind of insight are you looking for? Just saying ‘insight’ and ‘innovation’ is a wonderful thing, but first and foremost you need to focus.”
Kathy Reece, business analytics leader at IBM Global Business Services, commenting on findings from a November 2013 IBM survey: “It’s interesting that only one quarter of CEOs or COOs are the lead advocates for the use of analytic insights, even though they realize that innovation and revenue growth is the chief value of applying analytics. So we need to get more senior leadership advocating for the use of analytics.”
Chris Taylor, marketing director for TIBCO, March 2013: “There’s been a perception that if you get enough data, you can find something in it that’s meaningful. I think that’s a big mistake. The answer might be not big data at all, but small data.”
Which of these statements do you agree with? Let us know in the comments section.
Now explore our stats-filled look at big data trends and a few big questions. Which sports league is trailing the big data race? How will Internet of Things change the landscape? And is data quality getting any better? Dig in.
Sign-up here: http://meetu.ps/2pkxTq
When:
Monday, June 30, 2014
6:30 PM (London Time)
Where:
Barclays Accelerator
69-89 Mile End Road, E1 4UJ
London, United Kingdom
Big Data Workflows – Agenda
Svetlana Sicular, Gartner
June 17, 2014
http://blogs.gartner.com/svetlana-sicular/5-big-data-companies-to-watch
People often ask me if there is a magic quadrant for big data. There isn’t. What we have is a Hype Cycle for Big Data with abundance of big data technologies, some of which are just nascent, some are on the plateau of productivity, and some, like Hadoop distributions, are in the unrightfully dreaded and largely misunderstood trough of disillusionment.
Gartner also has annual cool vendor reports where analysts write about up and coming companies with innovative ideas, services and technologies. Many reports cover awesome big data vendors, for example, Cool Vendors in Big Data, Cool Vendors in Data Science and Cool Vendors in Information Innovation.
At Gartner for Technical Professionals (where I am), we usually publish vendor-neutral research and do not write for cool vendor reports (to be fair, we submit our choices and peer-review these reports). Yet, our clients constantly ask me and my colleagues about vendors. Last week, Fortune magazine published my opinion on big data companies to watch. My opinion was not about the best or the most prominent, most hyped or most intriguing, most funded or most profitable companies, but about the companies to watch.
Katherine Noyes, the author of the Fortune Magazine article, asked me to name five big data companies to watch and to comment on some published big data vendors lists. Below is my full response, it explains my choices:
Hi Katherine,
Well, selecting just five companies is a challenge since there are many more companies that do interesting things around big data. I have technical and non-technical considerations for giving my list of five. My top noteworthy big data companies would be:
As you may have noticed, I am covering various segments of big data technologies. If I had more than five companies to choose from, I’d also add companies in other segments:
Please note, this is not a comprehensive research and there are more very good companies. The companies I listed are “to watch” rather than best overall.
Now, to comment on the list of 100 big data companies you pointed me to. Out of this list, the following companies look appealing to me: Dataguise, MapR, MatterSight, Manhattan Software (an excellent player in real estate!) and Data Tamer (I would prefer Paxata though) – see my blog post Big Data Quantity vs. Quality.
I’d like to especially stop on The Hive. This VC company specializing in data has an unusual approach that I personally greatly appreciate. It conducts weekly live meetups, which cover diverse subjects and draw diverse people who are interested in big data. The Hive became one of the most well-known gatherings that attracts the brightest minds in big data as speakers (and as attendees). It became a social “big data hub” in Silicon Valley, and I believe, in India too. Being in the center of the big data life, the Hive has a great opportunity to make successful investments on early stages of data companies.
theCUBE
Jun 5, 2014
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GG76ZfSWe5I&list=PLenh213llmcaIG_3TR7Ql89F9i9
Chris Wensel talks to theCUBE about Concurrent’s funding, product vision, and what he sees happening to professionals working in Big Data.