Printer Friendly
The Free Library
19,125,530 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Evaluates Netezza Data Management Appliance for National Defense Applications.


Netezza delivers record-breaking analytic performance on largest semantic graph search

TAMPA, Fla. -- Netezza Corporation today announced that its Netezza Performance Server The Netezza Performance Server is a network attached computer appliance currently sold by Netezza.

As an appliance, it includes an embedded copy of Linux, a customized version of the open source PostgreSQL relational database, built-in storage, and an embedded processor
[R] appliance has performed a groundbreaking data analysis calculation with important potential applications in national defense.

Netezza's innovative data management appliance was evaluated by computer scientists at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory: see Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

(body) Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory - (LLNL) A research organaisatin operated by the University of California under a contract with the US Department of Energy.
 (LLNL LLNL - Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory ) as part of a partnership to develop a platform for the rapid management and analysis of very large data sets for international and homeland defense. Netezza's system uses a data-intensive rather than traditional compute-intensive approach.

Netezza's data management appliance, a massively parallel data analytic system, was evaluated by searching a massive semantic graph used to determine relationships between objects by storing nodes (the object) and how they link to other objects (an edge). Semantic graphs are an important technology for analyzing relationships in large data sets. The graph contained 300 billion edges and 11 billion nodes, the largest known graph search to date. A similar calculation by LLNL scientists last year was a finalist for the prestigious Gordon Bell Prize The Gordon Bell Prizes are a set of awards that were established in 1987. The Prizes were preceded by a similar much smaller prize (nominal) by Alan Karp (then of IBM) challenging claims of MIMD performance improvments proposed in the Letters to the Editor section of the .

Computer scientists ran level-set expansion, and bi-directional, breadth-first search against the data. More than 90 percent of the searches were completed in less than five minutes, demonstrating Netezza's ability to scale for managing and analyzing the largest data sets. These types of calculations have traditionally been conducted on very large and complex systems, but can now be executed on an appliance that is easy to deploy, maintain and use.

"We're looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 simplicity and scalability," said John Johnson, a LLNL computer scientist. "The ability to rapidly retrieve, manage and analyze large data sets is critical to our missions in global security and national defense."

"To have our partner LLNL evaluate the Netezza system and produce such dramatic results validates that our appliance approach easily handles the high-volume, complex analytics that government agencies need to quickly analyze and identify relationships," said Steve Williams, vice president and general manager of Netezza's Federal Division. "We look forward to working with LLNL to identify new opportunities for the unique capabilities of our system."

The Netezza Performance Server data management appliance is built specifically to analyze terabytes of detailed data 10 to 100 times faster than existing options, at half the cost. The NPS NPS National Park Service
NPS Naval Postgraduate School
NPS Net Promoter Score (customer management)
NPS Non-Point Source pollution
NPS Native Plant Society
NPS Norfolk Public Schools (Virginia) 
 system stores, filters and processes terabytes of records within a single unit, analyzing only the relevant information for each query. Netezza has placed the CPU CPU
 in full central processing unit

Principal component of a digital computer, composed of a control unit, an instruction-decoding unit, and an arithmetic-logic unit.
 power next to the data, allowing the NPS system to speed through processes that would occupy most data management systems for hours, or even days, thereby enabling dramatic increases in productivity across the organization.

Customers who have recognized the benefits of Netezza's approach include Amazon.com, Cingular Wireless, CNET (body) CNET - Centre national d'Etudes des Telecommunications. The French national telecommunications research centre at Lannion.  Networks, Department of Veterans Affairs, Orange UK and the United States Navy United States Navy

Major branch of the U.S. military forces, charged with defending the nation at sea and maintaining security on the seas wherever U.S. interests extend. The Continental Navy was established by the Continental Congress in 1775.
.

About Netezza Corporation

Netezza, the global data warehouse appliance Data Warehouse Appliance
A data warehouse (DW) appliance is an integrated set of servers, storage, OS, DBMS and software specifically pre-installed and pre-optimized for data warehousing.
 market leader, enables enterprises to make all of their data actionable - quickly, simply and affordably. The Netezza Performance Server (NPS) family of products delivers breakthrough performance, unmatched ease of deployment and operation, and innovative flexibility and scalability at a fraction of the cost of traditional data warehouse solutions. By architecturally integrating database, server and storage within a single appliance, the NPS system delivers 10 to 100 times the performance at half the cost of existing systems. Based in Framingham, Mass., Netezza has offices in Washington, DC, the United Kingdom and Asia Pacific. The Company is backed by leading venture capital firms Name Location Founding date Managing Partners/Directors Specialty Capital managed
5AM Ventures Menlo Park, CA; Waltham, MA 2002 John Diekman, PhD (managing partner), Scott Rocklage, PhD (managing partner), Andrew Schwab (managing partner) life sciences $200M [1]
, including Matrix Partners, Charles River Ventures, Battery Ventures, Orange, Sequoia Capital and Meritech Capital Partners. For more information about Netezza, please visit www.netezza.com.
COPYRIGHT 2006 Business Wire
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Publication:Business Wire
Date:Nov 16, 2006
Words:593
Previous Article:Catalyst Rx Recognized by Clients for Best Overall Service and Performance.
Next Article:Tech Data Corporation Appoints Three Senior Vice Presidents.
Topics:



Related Articles
Price tag for Price-Anderson Act.
DOE to pare some costs - and sell some labs.
Groundbreaking at Livermore Lab.
Power drain.
IBM SHIPS WORLD'S HIGHEST-RESOLUTION COMPUTER DISPLAY.
IBM AND DOE'S NNSA PARTNER TO EXPAND IBM'S BLUE GENE RESEARCH PROJECT.
LAB TURNS SDI TECHNOLOGY INTO GRAFFITI-ZAPPING LASER.
IBM to build world's fastest supercomputers for Dept of Energy.
VIBRANT CUSTOMERS SAVE OVER $1.3 BILLION.
GAO FINDS DOE REIMBURSED CONTRACTORS FOR $330.5M IN LEGAL FEES.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2012 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles