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Last year, former Google CEO Eric Schmidt told the crowd gathered at the Techonomy Conference in Lake Tahoe, CA that we now create as much information as possible within two days, as we have done since the dawn of civilization before the end of 2003. While Roger d. Moore would not agree and slightly change this assessment, the fact of the matter is that today we see the ridiculous (and exponential) telescopic data production and consumption — which only will continue to grow.
Thus, in the modern world, the data becomes a precious commodity. Many companies want to collect more data on their interaction habits and how you can better serve the client with ads, recommendations, detection tools and personalized product or service experience (and so on). But the question is, big data management and analysis still clunky and not able to understand what a great data means not being able to identify important relationships, connections and patterns in the data — it's just a big bunch of numbers and symbols.
Moreover, more and more datapoints pulled in social networks (and how to scale these networks) with servers, often in different parts of the large geographic areas, is becoming tougher and tougher on the backend system for the processing of complex data relationships.
InfiniteGraph,-year-old product and the brainchild of Sunnyvale-based enterprise database company objectivity goes out of beta today to help developers and companies to identify and use a deep link between nodes and edges in a large, distributed data sets. InfiniteGraph strives to reduce the amount of time needed to make these connections in a matter of seconds, processing large graph datasets, in areas such as government intelligence, social networking and social media, CRM, location-based services and financial analysts.
Work with these kind of large enterprises require support for billions of data points, and thus InfiniteGraph built system to enable scaling and big capacity, functionality in real time. Today InfiniteGraph expands its presence to enterprises and developers looking to mine their data stores for complex relationships, whether it be enterprise applications in small and medium-sized businesses, SMEs themselves or Fortune 500 companies.
However, it is important to note about InfiniteGraph in commercial release (time system in beta for the last year) is that it does not require developers to rebuild your databases from scratch to take advantage of this technology. Developers can simply use a dedicated platform APIs use InfiniteGraph graph in relationshop mining based on existing data. It also offers high-level management system database, which is a nice bonus.
Other features of note in InfiniteGraph in commercial release include loading data in parallel and accelerated swallow, means that developers can import and continuously feed apps with data from multiple input streams more quickly. The database diagram also enables developers to choose from a variety of indexing options that meet their company's specific needs (with automatic manual), as well as enabling the devs for review, verification and testing models of data in custom approaches.
As InfiniteGraph is designed to help companies use social network analysis and business intelligence to improve efficiency and gain a competitive advantage in the crowded markets, count database will now be available in free and licensed versions. (Check out licensed options here.) For compatibility, InfiniteGraph writes to the database in the Java language (with C++ core) can be used, Linux, Windows and Mac OS/X platforms and can also be deployed in most environments, virtualized cloud, according to its Web site.
The platform also has a license for "pay as you scale or through the use of a model that allows companies to increase their capacity to store (and is aimed at a more cost-effective way to use).
InfiniteGraph also announces a contest for developers who will offer up to $ 12000 in prizes, in addition to helping developers to promote their applications. The contest starts today and will take on 30 September. According to the representative InfiniteGraph "developers can create any type of software, web or mobile communication around social games or location-based networks, any process or knowledge management or something else, which seeks to find and use the complex relationships between objects or things." For more information about the contest, check it out here.
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