May 6, 2011
Elastra sinks into the dead pool
Elastra is an ex-company. I’m not surprised, except by the fact that it took so long.
Comments
2 Responses to “Elastra sinks into the dead pool”
Leave a Reply
Search our blogs and white papers
Monash Research blogs
- DBMS 2 covers database management, analytics, and related technologies.
- Text Technologies covers text mining, search, and social software.
- Strategic Messaging analyzes marketing and messaging strategy.
- The Monash Report examines technology and public policy issues.
- Software Memories recounts the history of the software industry.
User consulting
Building a short list? Refining your strategic plan? We can help.
Vendor advisory
We tell vendors what's happening -- and, more important, what they should do about it.
Monash Research highlights
Learn about white papers, webcasts, and blog highlights, by RSS or email. |
-
Recent posts
-
Categories
- About this blog
- Analytic glossary
- Analytic technologies
- Application areas
- Buying processes
- Companies and products
- 1010data
- Ab Initio Software
- Actian and Ingres
- Aerospike
- Akiban
- Aleri and Coral8
- Algebraix
- Alpha Five
- Amazon and its cloud
- ANTs Software
- Aster Data
- Ayasdi
- Basho and Riak
- Business Objects
- Calpont
- Cassandra
- Cast Iron Systems
- Cirro
- Citus Data
- ClearStory Data
- Cloudant
- Cloudera
- Clustrix
- Cogito and 7 Degrees
- Cognos
- Continuent
- Couchbase
- CouchDB
- Databricks, Spark and BDAS
- DATAllegro
- Datameer
- DataStax
- Dataupia
- dbShards and CodeFutures
- Elastra
- EMC
- Endeca
- EnterpriseDB and Postgres Plus
- Exasol
- Expressor
- FileMaker
- GenieDB
- Gooddata
- Greenplum
- Groovy Corporation
- Hadapt
- Hadoop
- HBase
- Hortonworks
- HP and Neoview
- IBM and DB2
- illuminate Solutions
- Infobright
- Informatica
- Information Builders
- Inforsense
- Intel
- Intersystems and Cache'
- Jaspersoft
- Kafka and Confluent
- Kalido
- Kaminario
- Kickfire
- Kognitio
- KXEN
- MapR
- MarkLogic
- McObject
- memcached
- MemSQL
- Metamarkets and Druid
- Microsoft and SQL*Server
- MicroStrategy
- MonetDB
- MongoDB
- MySQL
- Neo Technology and Neo4j
- Netezza
- NuoDB
- Nutonian
- Objectivity and Infinite Graph
- Oracle
- Oracle TimesTen
- ParAccel
- Pentaho
- Pervasive Software
- PivotLink
- Platfora
- PostgreSQL
- Progress, Apama, and DataDirect
- QlikTech and QlikView
- Rainstor
- Revolution Analytics
- Rocana
- salesforce.com
- SAND Technology
- SAP AG
- SAS Institute
- ScaleBase
- ScaleDB
- Schooner Information Technology
- SciDB
- SenSage
- SequoiaDB
- SnapLogic
- Software AG
- solidDB
- Splunk
- Starcounter
- StreamBase
- Sybase
- Syncsort
- Tableau Software
- Talend
- Teradata
- Tokutek and TokuDB
- Truviso
- VectorWise
- Vertica Systems
- VoltDB and H-Store
- WibiData
- Workday
- Xkoto
- XtremeData
- Yarcdata and Cray
- Zettaset
- Zoomdata
- Data integration and middleware
- Data types
- DBMS product categories
- Emulation, transparency, portability
- Fun stuff
- Market share and customer counts
- Memory-centric data management
- Michael Stonebraker
- Parallelization
- Presentations
- Pricing
- Public policy
- Software as a Service (SaaS)
- Specific users
- Storage
- Theory and architecture
- TransRelational
- Uncategorized
-
Date archives
-
Links
-
Admin
He had a nice parting blog, though. Gotta give the guy credit for taking responsibility. Even with the irresponsible way your meeting went.
Based on Twitter, I’d say that post is pretty controversial among his former colleagues.
Somehow they wind up feeling accused by it, perhaps because of the (largely unspecified in the post) form his management/leadership/whatever errors took.