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Intel Boosts Value of Altibase’s In Memory Hybrid Database

With SATA SSD and Xeon E7v2 processors

Intel Corp.‘s new solution overview details the extreme performance, capacity, and scalability of Altibase Corp.‘s In-Memory Hybrid Database with new Xeon E7v2 Processors.

The two firms have reached a milestone in their partnership through a recent solution overview released by Intel. Intel’s solution overview details the performance improvements garnered by Altibase HDB compared against Intel’s previous generation of Xeon processors.

The in-memory technology of Altibase’s Hybrid Database (HDB) supports high speeds and large volumes, translating into advantages in terms of processing in-memory and on-disk reads/writes,” said technology lead, Intel

Altibase’s maximum in-memory capacity increased to 12TB with an 8-socket Xeon processor E7 v2 based platform, and in-memory data processing performance increased by 1.94 times compared to the previous-generation of Xeon E7 processors.

Intel’s new E7v2 family of Xeon processors enabled our company to propose large capacity databases that simply weren’t possible in the past. By leveraging the performance and scalability of the E7v2 platform, we anticipate that this will lead to an even greater spike in sales for Altibase,” said JH Park, director, Altibase

The significance of this collaboration stems from Altibase’s hybrid architecture which unifies an in-memory and on-disk database into a single, ACID compliant, SQL standard compliant DBMS engine.

The recent collaboration further extends Altibase’s and Intel’s history of technology advancements. Together, the two companies have addressed the challenge of harnessing the potential of speed without compromising storage capabilities. They enable users to handle real time, high performance data processing without sacrificing scalability.

Altibase has proven its technology in over 5,000 mission-critical deployments for over 550 enterprise organizations. With roots reaching as far back as 1991, they have paved the way for in-memory computing.

Solution overview on Intel’s website

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