Actian[1] is an American software company headquartered in Santa Clara, California that provides analytics-related software, products, and services. The company sells database software and technology, cloud engineered systems, and data integration solutions.
Company type | Subsidiary |
---|---|
Industry | |
Founded | 1980 |
Headquarters | Santa Clara, California |
Products | Actian Data Platform Vector Ingres OpenROAD Zen (PSQL) NoSQL (Versant) DataConnect DataFlow Business Xchange Zeenea Data Discovery Platform |
Parent | HCLSoftware |
Website | www |
Timeline
edit- 1980: Relational Technology, Inc. was founded to commercialize Ingres (developed at UC Berkeley).
- 1988: RTI went public, raising $28 million on their IPO.
- 1989: Changed name to Ingres Corporation.
- 1990: ASK Computer Systems acquires Ingres Corporation.
- 1994: Computer Associates (CA) acquires the ASK Group.
- 2005: Ingres Corporation spun out of CA, with private equity firm Garnett & Helfrich Capital as largest shareholder.
- 2010: Ingres acquires VectorWise.
- 2011: Changed name to Actian.
- 2012: Actian acquires Versant Corporation.
- 2013: Actian acquires Pervasive Software and ParAccel.
- 2018: Actian was acquired by HCL Technologies and Sumeru Equity Partners for $330 million.[2]
- 2021: HCL Technologies became the sole owner of Actian.
History
editIngres
editIngres was developed at the University of California, Berkeley and commercialized by Relational Technology Inc. After a course of name changes and acquisitions, including VectorWise BV, Versant, Pervasive, and ParAccel, Actian came into existence as a multinational software firm.
Relational Technology, Incorporated (RTI), was founded in 1980 by Michael Stonebraker and Eugene Wong, and professor Lawrence A. Rowe to commercialize Ingres.[3] In the late 1980s, RTI had competition in the database management system (DBMS) market, including Oracle Corporation (which had started with the similar name Relational Software Incorporated), Informix Corporation, and Sybase, but was one of the largest DBMS companies.[4][5] RTI was renamed Ingres Corporation late in 1989.
ASK Computer Systems announced in September 1990 a deal in which ASK would acquire Ingres, funded partially by investments from Hewlett-Packard and Electronic Data Systems.[6] The deal met resistance from a shareholder,[7] but did complete by November 1990.[8]
Relation to Computer Associates
editComputer Associates (CA) acquired the ASK Group in 1994. Despite a loyal customer base, CA failed to develop the technology much further.[9]
Ingres Corporation was spun out of CA as a separate private company in November 2005, with private equity firm Garnett & Helfrich Capital as largest shareholder. Terry Garnett served as interim chief executive, and CA retained a 25% interest.[10] In July 2006, Roger Burkhardt became president.[11] He promoted open source software, and helped form Open Source for America in 2009.[12]
Ingres announced they had acquired the VectorWise technology in 2010, which had spun out from the Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica (CWI, the Dutch National Research Institute for Mathematics and Computer Science) in 2008.[13] In November 2010, Garnett & Helfrich Capital acquired the last 20% of equity in Ingres Corporation that it did not already own.[14] In July 2011, Steve Shine became chief executive officer.[15]
Actian
editIn September 2011, Ingres changed its name to Actian, using the marketing phrase "action apps".[16] CEO Steve Shine said the new focus would be on lower-cost sales for its cloud action platform.[17]
In February 2014, Forbes.com listed Actian at #5 in its "Top 10 Big Data Pure-Plays 2014" citing $138 million in Actian revenue for 2013.[18]
In August, 2016, it was reported that Actian had phased out its products promoted for big data, including the former ParAccel, VectorWise, and DataFlow technology.[19][20] On November 1, 2016, Shine was replaced as chief executive by Rohit De Souza. A new chief financial officer and executive chairman were also appointed.[21]
In April, 2017, several products were renamed, including the combination of Ingres and the former Vector product into one product, Actian X, with new features.[22]
Actian released a product called Avalanche in March 2019 for use on the Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud.[23] In November 2023, Actian rebranded and relaunched Avalanche as Actian Data Platform, including new capabilities for Data Quality.[24]
Lewis Black (previously chief financial officer) took over as CEO in 2020.[25] In January 2023, Marc Potter was named CEO, after serving as Chief Revenue and Operations Officer since 2019.[26]
Acquisitions
editVectorWise B.V.
editVectorwise originated from the X100 research project carried out within the Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica (CWI, the Dutch National Research Institute for Mathematics and Computer Science) between 2003 and 2008. It was spun off as a start-up company in 2008, and acquired by Ingres Corporation in 2011.[27] It was released as a commercial product in June, 2010,[28][29][30] initially for 64-bit Linux platform, and later also for Windows.
Versant Corporation
editVersant Corporation was an American-based software company building specialized NoSQL data management systems. In late 2012, after rejecting an offer by Unicom Systems, Versant announced it agreed to be acquired by Actian, promoted using the term big data.[31] It closed in December 2012 for an estimated $37 million.[32]
ParAccel, Inc.
editParAccel was a California-based software company that developed a database management system designed to provide advanced analytics for business intelligence. It was acquired by Actian in April 2013.[33][34] Analysts expected Actian to market ParAccel for larger databases, and VectorWise for moderately sized applications.[35]
Pervasive Software
editPervasive Software was a company that developed software including database management systems and extract, transform and load tools. Pervasive PSQL relational database management system was its primary data storage product.
In December 2003 Pervasive acquired Data Junction Corporation, a privately held company with headquarters also in Austin which produced data and application integration tools renamed Pervasive Data Integrator and later DataConnect, for about US$51.7 million in cash and stock shares.[36][37]
In 2013, Pervasive Software was acquired by Actian Corporation for $161.9 million, increased from an initial offer of $154 million.[32][38][39]
Products and services
editActian Data Platform
editThe Actian Data Platform, formerly called Avalanche, is a fully managed Cloud Data Platform for high performance operational analytics available on Google Cloud Platform,[40] Microsoft Azure[41] and AWS.[42]
It offers a fully managed hybrid cloud data warehouse service designed from the ground up to deliver high performance at scale on commodity infrastructure (running on Kubernetes), using Vector as the core database engine (a vectorized, MPP, fully ANSI SQL compliant RDBMS). It also offers native data integration and data quality capabilities, based on an integrated cloud version of Actian DataConnect, and basic data visualization capabilities.
It’s marketed as a zero-DBA, Cloud Data Service that can be directly used by business analyst, data engineers, data scientists, or power-users to pull hundreds of terabytes of disparate and diverse data into a single cloud data warehouse, run sub-second queries and advanced analytics and then visualize and report, leveraging most popular tools through easily navigated menus.
Vector
editActian Vector (formerly known as Vectorwise or VectorWise) is an SQL relational database management system designed for high performance in analytical database applications.[43]
Starting from 3.5 release in April 2014, the product name was shortened to "Vector".[44] In June 2014, Actian Vortex was announced - clustered MPP version of Vector, working in Hadoop with storage in HDFS.[45][46] Actian Vortex was later renamed to Actian Vector in Hadoop. In turn, Actian Vector became the core engine in Actian Avalanche.
Ingres
editIngres is a proprietary SQL relational database management system intended to support large commercial and government applications.
On April 18, 2017, Actian X was introduced as the first natively integrated hybrid database, unifying transactional and analytic processing within a single platform.[47] It integrates features from Ingres and Vector, such as column-based storage, vectorized processing, and multi-core parallelism, supporting diverse workloads for efficient and scalable data management.[48]
In 2024, Actian withdraw the Actian X brand, making all it's features and capabilities available to the Ingres 12.0 release.
OpenROAD
editOpenROAD was the small-machine offering of the Ingres database. The suite included applications-by-forms (ABF), an early 4GL computer programming language. It provided an ASCII form painter, which automatically bound form fields to a database using ABF, a programming language, with embedded SQL, simplifying the task of making a "CRUD" application for textual data. ABF source code was interpreted into a 3GL language (C or COBOL), which is then compiled so snippets of the native language may be directly embedded in the ABF code. ABF was deprecated by OpenROAD in the early nineties.[citation needed]
Several other database vendors marketed comparable 4GLs at around the same time, such as Pick System Builder, Clipper, and DBASE III. ABF was deprecated by the OpenROAD business unit in the early nineties.
DataConnect
editActian DataConnect (originally Data Junction), is a versatile data integration platform that enables companies to connect, transform, and manage data across multiple systems and applications.[49]
It supports real-time synchronization, complex transformations, and comprehensive API connectivity, making it ideal for complex enterprise workflows. DataConnect 12.2 was release in August 2023, introducing improved support for Data Quality metrics generation.[50]
Zen (PSQL)
editActian Zen (PSQL) (formerly Btrieve, later named Pervasive PSQL until version 13) is an ACID-compliant, Zero-DBA, Embedded, Nano-footprint, Multi-Model, Multi-Platform database management system (DBMS).[51]
Zeenea
editIn August 2024, HCLSoftware announced its intent to acquire the French metadata management platform startup Zeenea for €24 million.[52] The acquisition was completed on September 12, 2024, with Zeenea becoming part of Actian's product portfolio.[53]
Zeenea Data Discovery Platform is designed to simplify data discovery and governance within enterprises, offering two key interfaces[54]:
- Zeenea Studio: Tailored for data stewards and managers, focusing on data cataloging, governance, and metadata management.
- Zeenea Explorer: User-friendly search tool aimed at business users, enabling easy data asset discovery.
References
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- ^ "Announcement under Regulation 30 (LODR)-Updates on Acquisition". bseindia.com. July 18, 2018.
- ^ Curt Monash (May 23, 2005). "Mike Stonebraker". Computer World. Archived from the original on December 12, 2013. Retrieved December 7, 2013.
- ^ Lawrence M. Fisher (September 17, 1989). "Oracle's Envious Ascent". The New York Times. Retrieved December 7, 2013.
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- ^ Sandra L. Kurtzig; Thomas Trebitsch Parker (1994). CEO: Building a $400 Million Company from the Ground Up. Harvard Business School Press. ISBN 978-0-87584-542-5.
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- ^ Zukowski, Marcin; Boncz, Peter (2012). "From x100 to vectorwise". Proceedings of the 2012 international conference on Management of Data - SIGMOD '12. p. 861. doi:10.1145/2213836.2213967. ISBN 978-1-4503-1247-9. S2CID 9187072.
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