The i-Technology Media!
Register | Log in
   
 
.NET  ·  AJAX  ·  CLOUD  ·  ECLIPSE  ·  FLEX  ·  OPEN WEB  ·  iPHONE  ·  JAVA  ·  LINUX  ·  OPEN SOURCE  ·  ORACLE  ·  PBDJ  ·  SEARCH  ·  SILVERLIGHT  ·  SOA  ·  VIRTUALIZATION  ·  WEB 2.0  ·  WIRELESS  ·  XML
Comments
Drool, Britannia? Is the UK Failing the Cloud?
By Roger Strukhoff
Richard Davies wrote: The UK has a good crop of technology pioneers in cloud computing - for example ElasticHosts, FlexiScale, Flexiant, OnApp - and also some strong government initiatives such as G-Cloud. We will have to see whether this kind of technical leadership converts into swift mass-market adoption or not.
Jan. 8, 2012 11:38 AM EST
read more & respond »
Cloud Expo on Google News
Did you read today's front page stories & breaking news?

Cloud Expo & Virtualization 2011 West
Keynotes
Oracle
Opening Keynote | An Enterprise Cloud for Business-Critical Applications
Abiquo
Day 2 Keynote | The Enterprise Cloud Tightrope - Balancing for Success
Akamai
Day 3 Keynote | The DNA of an Enterprise Cloud
DIAMOND SPONSOR:
Oracle
Many Clouds, Many Choices'Cloud
PLATINUM PLUS SPONSORS:
Abiquo
Enterprise Cloud Best Practices - Town Hall - Join the discussion…
PLATINUM SPONSORS:
Intel
Progressing Toward the Federated, Automated and Client-Aware Cloud
New Relic
How to build an app with Twitter-like throughput
Rackspace
Computing in the Cloud Era
GOLD SPONSORS:
Gale Technologies
Practical Cloud Migration
IBM
Re-think IT. Re-inventing Business.
Intel/McAfee
Identity Driven Security in the Cloud
PerspecSys
Hackers Hackers Everywhere, Is My Public Cloud That Safe?
Red Hat
Unlock the Value of the Cloud
SHI
Mission Critical Applications and the Cloud - Myth or Reality?
SoftLayer
Not Your Grandpa's Cloud
Terremark
Integrating Enterprise Clouds
VMware
Upgrade to a vCloud
POWER PANELS:
Cloud Expo Silicon Valley: CTO Power Panel
Cloud Expo Silicon Valley: CEO Power Panel
Cloud Expo Silicon Valley: Cloud SuperStars Panel
Cloud Expo Silicon Valley: CloudNOW Panel
Click For 2010 West
Event Webcasts
Cloud Expo & Virtualization 2011 East
DIAMOND SPONSOR:
Dell
Dell & VMware Deliver the Enterprise Hybrid Cloud
PLATINUM PLUS SPONSORS:
Abiquo
Are Financial Services Organizations Risking Security by Avoiding Cloud Computing?
Oracle
From Consolidation to Enterprise Private PaaS
PLATINUM SPONSORS:
Intel
Driving the Transformation to Next Generation Cloud Data Centers
Rackspace
The Inevitability of an Open Cloud
GOLD SPONSORS:
CA Technologies
Follow YOUR path to Cloud Computing
Interxion
Who Keeps the Cloud in the Air?
Microsoft
Patterns for Cloud Computing
PerspecSys
War in the Clouds: Are you ready?
ServiceMesh
The Big Win: Stop Playing Small-Ball with Your Cloud Strategy
Terremark
Evaluating Enterprise Clouds
Xiotech
Cloud Storage: Myths and Realities
POWER PANELS:
Cloud Expo New York: CTO Power Panel
Cloud Expo New York: CEO Power Panel
Cloud Expo New York: CMO Power Panel
Cloud Expo New York: Wrap-Up Power Panel
Click For 2010 West
Event Webcasts
Live Google News by SYS-CON!
Top Three Links You Must Click On


Open Source Databases
What’s Larry Gonna Do About This?
Kickfire is targeting the mid-market below where Netezza and Teradata play

By: Maureen O'Gara
Oct. 1, 2009 12:00 PM

Startup Journal on Ulitzer

Kickfire, the data warehouse start-up with its very own parallel-processing SQL chip – and the first low-end data warehouse play ever – has beefed up its MySQL Enterprise-based appliance so it’ll stretch to systems that are 5TB.

Back in the spring when it started rolling its widgets out they were good for up to 3TB and started at $32,000, claiming to be the equivalent of a $250,000 proprietary system.

The start-up has also beefed up its software with a 1.5 so-called “Photon” release that ups performance by running 95% of the queries through its SQL chip and makes its Data Manipulation Language (DML) 300% faster.

Kickfire is targeting the mid-market below where Netezza and Teradata play, the region where SQL Server doesn’t scale, DB2 is minimally present and Oracle is too costly and complex.

It’s aiming at the MySQL base that doesn’t buy much software support but does spend about half-a-billion dollars a year on data warehousing hardware.

The world has kinda changed since Kickfire announced its first systems and was scratching its head over why in the world Sun, who owns MySQL, had canceled all its reference arrangements and foresworn any new ones.

That was right before Oracle said it was buying Sun, proposing to turn Sun boxes into Oracle appliances.

Obviously this is a space worth watching. (Ah, the smell of M&A in the morning.)

Anyway, according to Kickfire CEO Bruce Armstrong (pictured above), a Teradata vet, “The vast majority of data warehouse professionals need affordable high-performance data warehousing at the terabyte-scale, especially given recent reductions in budget. Other vendors who are focused on petabyte-scale data warehouses force users into expensive and resource-intensive technologies. Our breakthrough parallel-processing SQL chip delivers the industry’s best performance per dollar, per watt and per cubic foot. We’re focused on helping the thousands of organizations that would have otherwise deferred projects due to cost.”

Kickfire claims as new customers Mindspark, the IAC division, and LiveRail, a rising star in the video ad server market and a MySQL devotee. It says it’s increased their data warehouse performance by up to 500 times.

“Enterprise customers that need to increase performance, but don’t want to spend another million dollars to do it,” Armstrong chirped.

Kickfire’s also got Clear Peak, the technology consultancy whose managers include Teradata founder Jerry Modes as well as Ernst & Young, Nikon, Cigna, AT&T, Dish Network, Comcast and Feed the Children.

Besides being the lowest-cost appliance on the market, Kickfire claims its new high-performance 3000 series is the fastest to deploy – less than a day because of a streamlined Migration Wizard that moves data from the source by pointing-and-clicking and a faster Loader.

Besides increased capacity, it also includes more enterprise-class features such as high-availability, query-while-load and a RAID card for external storage.

The 2000 Series, wheeled out in the spring, was limited to on-board storage and up to 2.4TB of disk compared to the 3000’s 14.4TB of disk.

The 2000, which starts at $32k, was meant for test, development and small data warehouses. The 3000, which starts at $150k, or $10k a terabyte, is aimed at mid-range data warehouses.

IDC says two-thirds of all data warehouses are in the sub-5TB range and that MySQL is the third most frequently used database for data warehousing. There are 12 million active MySQL installations, roughly 25% of which are doing data warehousing. However, the low end is not only price-sensitive, it typically lacks warehousing expertise or IT resources.

Kickfire quotes IDC VP, business analytics solutions research Dan Vesset as saying that he expects the new Kickfire product “to find a receptive audience among many organizations looking to boost their data warehousing and business analytics capabilities while controlling their initial and ongoing costs of such a solution."

Kickfire’s chips, each said to be the equivalent of 10 servers, pack the power of 30 CPUs into a small (2U-3U), low-power (650W) form factor, avoiding the hardware build-out, power and datacenter space required by rival offerings.

It Centos-based appliance also includes a columnar engine that reportedly cuts the disks required by rivals by 90%. It replaces MySQL’s own storage engine and structures data like columns rather than the traditional rows. That’s supposed to mean better compression and better ad-hoc query performance because only the columns being queried – not all the rows – have to be scanned.

The widget can plug into an existing ETL and BI infrastructure. The company has open source partnerships with Jaspersoft, Pentaho and Talend.

Kickfire is backed to the tune of $20 million by Accel Partners, Greylock Partners, the Mayfield Fund

Published Oct. 1, 2009— Reads 4,517 — Feedback 1
Copyright © 2009 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
About Maureen O'Gara
Maureen O'Gara the most read technology reporter for the past 20 years, is the Cloud Computing and Virtualization News Desk editor of SYS-CON Media. She is the publisher of famous "Billygrams" and the editor-in-chief of "Client/Server News" for more than a decade. One of the most respected technology reporters in the business, Maureen can be reached by email at maureen(at)sys-con.com or paperboy(at)g2news.com, and by phone at 516 759-7025. Twitter: @MaureenOGara

Add Your Feedback

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

Register | Sign-in

Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1

#1
Jerome Pineau commented on 30 Sep 2009

Great article.

As I point out in a recent blog post (http://bit.ly/4syQyk) I don't think Larry has a clue what to do with MySQL.

Additionally, there aren't too many vendors "focused on petabyte-scale" out there IMHO

I think KF is going to have a rough time with InfoBright breathing down its neck. This proprietary hardware/chip business in a commodity market is simply hard to grok.


Subscribe to the World's Most Powerful Newsletters
Subscribe to Our Rss Feeds & Get Your SYS-CON News Live!
Click to Add our RSS Feeds to the Service of Your Choice:
Google Reader or Homepage Add to My Yahoo! Subscribe with Bloglines Subscribe in NewsGator Online
myFeedster Add to My AOL Subscribe in Rojo Add 'Hugg' to Newsburst from CNET News.com Kinja Digest View Additional SYS-CON Feeds
Publish Your Article! Please send it to editorial(at)sys-con.com!

Advertise on this site! Contact advertising(at)sys-con.com! 201 802-3021

SYS-CON Featured Whitepapers

ADS BY GOOGLE

Breaking Java News
Tangoe, Inc. Announces Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2011 Financial Results
DDi Corp. Announces Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2011 Results
Fannie Mae Prices $977 Million Multifamily DUS REMIC Under Its GeMS™ Program
ArcGIS Online Now Available in Nine Additional Languages
Agilent Technologies Reports First-Quarter 2012 Results
Vitacost.com Launches New Website Ahead of Schedule
Equinix Expands Washington, D.C. Data Center Campus
Brady Corporation Declares Quarterly Dividend to Shareholders
Jarden Reports Record Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2011 Revenue and Segment Earnings

ADVERTISE   |   MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS   |   FREE BREAKING-NEWSLETTERS!   |   SYS-CON.TV   |   BLOG-N-PLAY!   |   WEBCAST   |   EDUCATION   |   RESEARCH

.NET Developer's Journal - .NETDJ   |   ColdFusion Developer's Journal - CFDJ   |   Eclipse Developer's Journal - EDJ   |   Enterprise Open Source Magazine - EOS
Open Web Developer's Journal - OPENWEB   |   iPhone Developer's Journal - iPHONE   |   Virtualization - Virtualization   |   Java Developer's Journal - JDJ   |   Linux.SYS-CON.com
PowerBuilder Developer's Journal - PBDJ   |   SEO / SEM Journal - SJ   |   SOAWorld Magazine - SOAWM   |   IT Solutions Guide - ITSG   |   Symbian Developer's Journal - SDJ
WebLogic Developer's Journal - WLDJ   |   WebSphere Journal - WJ   |   Wireless Business & Technology - WBT   |   XML-Journal - XMLJ   |   Internet Video - iTV
Flex Developer's Journal - Flex   |   AJAXWorld Magazine - AWM   |   Silverlight Developer's Journal - SLDJ   |   PHP.SYS-CON.com   |   Web 2.0 Journal - WEB2
Apache   |   CMS   |   CRM   |   HP   |   Oracle Journal   |   Perl   |   Python   |   Red Hat   |   Ruby on Rails   |   SAP   |   SaaS

SYS-CON MEDIA:   ABOUT US   |   CONTACT US   |   COMPANY NEWS   |   CAREERS   |   SITE MAP
SYS-CON EVENTS:   |  AJAXWorld Conference & Expo  |  iPhone Developer Summit  |  Cloud Computing Conference & Expo  |  SOA World Conference & Expo  |  Virtualization Conference & Expo
INTERNATIONAL SITES:   India  |  U.K.  |  Canada  |  Germany  |  France  |  Australia  |  Italy  |  Spain  |  Netherlands  |  Brazil  |  Belgium
 Terms of Use & Our Privacy Statement     About Newsfeeds / Video Feeds
Copyright ©1994-2008 SYS-CON Publications, Inc. All Rights Reserved. All marks are trademarks of SYS-CON Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of SYS-CON Publications, Inc. is prohibited.
 
close this window