SAP on Wednesday outlined a roadmap for its in-memory computing applications. The enterprise applications giant has been hot for in-memory computing as a way to speed up analytics while cutting out ...
SAP strengthened its eager embrace of in-memory computing on Wednesday, announcing plans for a series of applications that include programs it calls previously “unimaginable” as well as some that ...
More details emerged Wednesday about SAP’s plans to build new in-memory database appliances for high-speed analytics, which could set the vendor up against platforms like Oracle’s Exadata. SAP is ...
SAP is planning to work with partners to develop new hardware appliances that employ its in-memory database technology that could potentially serve as rivals to Oracle’s Exadata data-processing ...
This week’s SAP Sapphire Now conference marked about a year since the company launched its HANA (High Performance Analytic Appliance) in-memory computing platform. Since then, SAP has done its best to ...
The company also will adapt its existing software products to take advantage of the HANA (high-performance analytic appliance) system SAP began selling in December. HANA is based on in-memory ...
At SAP TechEd 2012 in Las Vegas, SAP unveiled its plans for SAP HANA Cloud, a next-generation cloud platform based on in-memory technology. As part of SAP HANA Cloud, the company also announced the ...
In-memory databases are fast becoming the rule and not the exception. Oracle, IBM, Microsoft, Pivotal — there’s barely a major database vendor or analytics technology that isn’t getting a shot of ...
SAP plans to release its High-Performance Analytic Appliance (HANA) in November, roughly six months after announcing the product. The HANA machines employ in-memory technology SAP has been developing ...
The first version of SAP‘s HANA (High-Performance Analytic Appliance) software is now shipping, the vendor said Wednesday, and it also announced the first in a planned series of specialized ...
SAP strengthened its eager embrace of in-memory computing on Wednesday, announcing plans for a series of applications that include programs it calls previously “unimaginable” as well as some that ...