Analytics database firm Exasol has partnered with Bigstep to host its SQL EXASolution in-memory service on the firm's bare-metal cloud servers.
The move aims to help customers bypass the need for complex internal
IT infrastructure to support data analysis by allowing customers to
benefit from the full processing power of the HP servers that support
the Bigstep Full Metal Cloud.
This avoids having to share server resources in the virtualised
environments of other public clouds from providers such as Amazon Web
Services.
Guy Lipscombe (pictured), Exasol's UK managing director, explained to V3
that this approach allows companies to carry out high-speed analytics
on SQL databases without encountering performance-sapping "noisy
neighbours" on the same cloud.
Businesses can avoid the shortcomings of a public cloud by setting up
their own private cloud, but the outlay can be costly and it needs to
be built with growth in mind, eroding the scope to scale cloud resources
up or down.
Lipscombe explained that, while EXASolution can be deployed in other
public clouds and on-premise servers, the Bigstep partnership offers
several advantages to the database's users.
"In the case of Bigstep, it is able to offer that raw performance you
get on bare-metal [servers] but it also offers the flexibility you want
from a cloud. It also offers the security that a lot of cloud providers
maybe don't quite have," he said.
"We liked it because we got a very complementary message. They claim
to be the highest performance cloud platform out there, and we claim to
be the fastest database out there. That's a natural marriage."
Lipscombe went on to explain that businesses looking to carry out
rapid and scalable analytics will be most attracted to EXASolution on
the Full Metal Cloud.
These customers could include retail companies needing rapid analytics of stock levels during peak sales periods.
Lipscombe also said that companies enjoying rapid growth and
subsequently needing more data analytics can benefit from the added
performance of bare-metal servers, without worrying about the need to
install new IT infrastructure.
He cited Candy Crush developer King Digital Entertainment as an
example of an existing EXASolution user that could benefit from Full
Metal Cloud.
"Like King with Candy Crush, when it went on to Facebook [growth]
jumped, then it went to mobile and it went completely through the roof,"
he said.
"If you have an exploding business you can just easily add nodes and
deploy in Bigstep without having to worry about the physical space and
getting all the kit and wiring it all up."
Bigstep appears to be bolstering its Full Metal Cloud offering, having recently teamed up with big data specialist Datameer to offer its Hadoop-based software as an analytics service through the cloud.
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