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Friday, September 12. 2008
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Netezza to Announce Spatial Extension to Data Warehouse Appliance
We in the geospatial world have over the past decade or so wrapped our brains around spatial extensions for databases. I’m the first to admit, it took me quite a bit of time to get used to the idea that geometry was just another field like data and number. Now we are sort of blase about yet another database adding a geospatial type. That’s good because I need to blow your mind just a little.
Next week Netezza a data warehouse appliance company will announce its spatial extension to its database. “It has a database?”you ask. “I’ve never heard of it.” You and me both! But I spoke to Jonathan Shepherd, who heads the geospatial initiative at Netezza, who gave me the lowdown. Peter Batty was also on the call. He's been hinting at this for a while.
So what? Go back to that “scream” reference. The appliance allows BI analyses to be done much, much faster - 10 to 20 to 100 times faster. So, if you need your geospatial analyses to be done much, much faster, this may be a solution to consider.
Who’s a candidate for this appliance? The clearest answer for me is that there are two types of potential users: (1) those doing BI (perhaps with Netezza but not necessarily) that want to add geospatial data and analysis and (2) those doing geospatial who need that optimized level of performance.
Do you need to leave your Oracle Spatial or ArcSDE or SQL Server 2008 or PostGIS, etc. implementation behind? Not necessarily. It may be worthwhile to load the data into Netezza for large, CPU demanding analyses and leave the existing spatial database for other types of work. Further, you need not leave your GIS software and applications behind. Netezza has lined several familiar names whose products have been certified to run as clients against the Netezza warehouse: Safe, MapInfo, Idea Integration, Intergraph, SRC and thincSoft.
The announcement will be made next week at the Netezza User Conference in Florida. The company is based in Marlborough, Massachusetts and has 200 clients. It’s publicly traded and brought in $127 million in revenue last year.
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