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12.23.2002
Jit Saxena: A Different Way Of Thinking
Common wisdom says that data-warehouse projects are complex,
expensive, and can have failure rates as high as 90%.
But Jit Saxena doesn't believe it has to be that way.
Read
the full story |
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11.22.2002
Vibrant Solutions Selects Netezza Performance Server
Read
the full story |
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11.19.2002
...newcomer Netezza recently launched the Netezza Performance
Server 8000 appliance to increase the speed of data mining...
Read
the full story |
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11.15.2002
Count Netezza among the new breed of innovative BI solution
providers Read
the full story |
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11.11.2002
Just call it the mother of all appliances. Read
the full story |
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11.07.2002
Netezza Performance Server Certified for MicroStrategy
BI Platform Read
the full story |
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11.01.2002
"Netezza's product shows great promise," says Giga Information
Group analyst Philip Russom. Read
the full story |
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10.28.2002
Vibrant Solutions Selects Netezza Performance Server
Read
the full story |
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10.16.2002
Cheaper, faster data analysis spells 'results' for Netezza
Read
the full story |
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10.07.2002
"...we saw 300% to 1,000% performance improvements on average
using Netezza's server" Read
the full story |
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10.01.2002
The Netezza Performance Server (NPS) 8000 Series from
Netezza Corporation is the world's first purpose-built,
tera-scale data appliance for Fortune 1000 companies and
other data-intensive organizations that need faster, more
sophisticated business intelligence (BI). Read
the full story |
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9.30.2002
A new appliance from Netezza Corp. promises to increase
the performance of business intelligence queries by 10
to 20 times. Read
the full story |
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9.27.2002
A new appliance from Netezza Corp. promises to increase
the performance of business intelligence queries by 10
to 20 times. Read
the full story |
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9.23.2002
Epsilon Data Management Inc., which sells data-management
and database-marketing services, is trying out the Netezza
servers. "The queries do fly," says Mike Coakley,
an Epsilon marketing VP. Read
the full story |
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9.23.2002
This product combines server, storage and database into
a single powerful and scalable appliance created from
the outset to process queries faster and enable complex
data analysis that was not previously possible because
of large and fast-growing data sizes. This new architecture
breaks traditional performance benchmarks and many of
the technical roadblocks that paralyze today's patchwork
of general-purpose offerings. Read
the full story |
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9.23.2002
...Netezza Performance Server (NPS) 8000 series will deliver
better performance at a lower price than previously available.
Read
the full story |
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9.23.2002
Netezza Corp. in Framingham has launched its first product,
the Netezza Performance Server 8000, a high-speed, tera-scale
data appliance for the networks of large corporations.
Read
the full story |
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9.19.2002
Netezza named as most likely to succeed by Technologic
Partners. Read
the full story |
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7.2002
Netezza Corp. is developing a BI appliance that analyzes
terabytes of data quickly. This is particularly valuable
to fast-moving businesses that regularly collect huge
amounts of data. Read
the full story |
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7.12.2002
As business and technical demands continue to grow and
change in the new century, the new BI appliance will be
designed from the outset to scale with data size, scope
and performance needs. Read
the commentary by Jit Saxena |
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6.19.2002
CEO Jit Saxena is interviewed by Dave Anthony of the Boston
Business Journal AM Report. |
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5.16.2002
Netezza Spawns a Monster. In the next 90 days Netezza
Corp., a database acceleration startup, plans to launch
the god-box to end all god-boxes. Read
the full story |
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5.14.2002
[New board member Ed] Zander "hopes to catch the
next wave in computing" and thinks Netezza will upend
the competition. The market for systems that mine business
intelligence data is one of the few tech "hot spots".
Read
the full story |
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5.14.2002
Edward J. Zander, the retiring president and chief operating
officer of Sun Microsystems, will join the board of Netezza,
a start-up company that makes computers. Read
the full story |
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5.13.2002
[Netezza a] two-year-old company provides a platform for
managing and navigating business information, quickly
and cheaply. Read
the full story |
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5.13.2002
Netezza Corp., Framingham, Mass., announced that Ed Zander,
former president and chief operating officer of Sun Microsystems
Inc. has joined its board. Netezza has developed a hardware
and software server for business intelligence applications.
Read
the full story |
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5.13.2002
... given Mr. Zander's relationships and experience, Netezza
may benefit from introductions to potential customers
and from marketing advice. Read
the full story |
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5.13.2002
Netezza has scored an early victory by recruiting Mr.
Zander, who has been in high demand since he announced
his departure. Read
the full story |
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5.13.2002
"This is an appliance for this specific market of business intelligence,"
Zander said, noting that companies need better and less
expensive ways to analyze data about customers and their
own processes. Read
the full story |
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5.6.2002
[Netezza board member] Zander is one of the best marketing
minds that is out there. Read
the full story |
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5.13.2002
Netezza has a world-class management team, top-tier venture
funding and a powerful value proposition for companies
that want to get more business value out of the data they
are collecting. Read
the full story |
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3.11.2002
Netezza Corp., Framingham, Mass., announced it completed
a $20 million round of Series B financing on Monday. The
oversubscribed round, led by Battery Ventures, also features
participation from Matrix Partners and Charles River Ventures.
Read
the full story |
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3.11.2002
When you're dealing with terabytes of data, you need a
fundamentally new architecture," he says. "We
started with a clean sheet of paper and focused on the
problem of terascale data." Read
the full story |
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3.11.2002
Netezza Corp.'s chief executive and co-founder, didn't
call a soul in his company's funding search. Instead,
the venture capitalists called him..."There's a lot
of money looking for the highest-quality deals. So deals
like Netezza get auctioned while 98 percent of the other
deals go hungry," said Ollie Curme, a general partner
at Battery. Read
the full story |
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