Terracotta, a wholly owned subsidiary of Software AG, Germany, announced that its flagship offering, BigMemory, the industry's leading in-memory big data management solution, has won the 2012 DataWeek Award for Top Innovator in the "Big Data Technology" category. Terracotta BigMemory was awarded this distinction for its innovation in data management, which is just one of many categories DataWeek monitors. As an award winner, Terracotta will also present at DataWeek 2012, the largest data-centric conference and festival in the nation, taking place from 22 to 27 September, in San Francisco.
"We are happy to recognise Terracotta among the best talent in the industry today," said Geoff Domoracki, CEO of DataWeek. "In an information economy, data is the new capital. Corporations are unlocking the value in their terabytes of data, city governments are opening up their city data for public use, and thousands of 'data start-ups' are building on top of emerging social data feeds. We succeed in business, technology and society when we join a new ecosystem of data feeds, data infrastructure, data technologies and data markets."
Terracotta BigMemory provides a simple, snap-in solution that easily integrates into existing IT environments to deliver immediate business value. It unlocks the value in big data by maximising the use of inexpensive memory (RAM) to deliver a comprehensive solution for real-time access to massive volumes of business data, delivering up to 1 000 times faster access to terabytes of data than any other technology.
"We are very proud to have DataWeek name BigMemory the top innovator in big data," said Gary Nakamura, general manager of Terracotta. "We know that the explosion of big data volume, velocity and variety creates business challenges that legacy platforms simply cannot address. This award validates BigMemory's industry leadership as a significant improvement in big data management. By delivering performance at terabyte scale, our innovations continue to create real business opportunities for our customers."
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