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A loyal customer alerted us toan Oracle blog by Jean-Pierre Dijcks earlier today that showed the Oracle FUD machine is fully revved-up and ready to go. I'd like to offer a rebuttal, however in the interest of not intruding on Jean-Pierre's entry with an overly-long comment, I've just put a short response on his blog post with a pointer to this one.


Misconceptions and Misunderstandings, or Errors and Plain-old FUD?

I’m writing to correct *just a few* of the misconceptions about what is really important in high-performance, scalable data warehouse systems, errors, or just plain-old pure “competitive FUD” points from Jean-Pierre's posting earlier today. We certainly have posted some information recently about the TwinFin product and Curt Monash’s postings late Thursday provided more info. If his readers are interested in learning more, or even signing up for a “Test Drive”, they should visit www.netezza.com.

First off, I think this is a “banner day” for Netezza. We believe that TwinFin (and the other products in the new product family)
extend both our performance and price-performance advantage over our competitors. We stand by our marketing statements that we regularly demonstrate 10-100X performance advantages over our competitors, particularly competitive offerings of the major incumbent DW system vendors (“Just who are those incumbents?” Jean-Pierre's readers may ask. Well let’s just say that we see Oracle as the incumbent system and/or a challenger system in over 50% of our deal flow.).

Regarding his claims about DBM being “
faster than Netezza” (and I can only assume he meant at “real” data warehouse tasks) - we’re ready whenever Oracle feels up to actually taking one of their Database Machines onsite to a customer for a fair, open customer benchmark. So far, Oracle have been, shall we say, “a little reticent” to do on-site benchmark testing against Netezza.

Next, given the large number of incorrect points in the original posting, I think perhaps that just a few of them will be useful enough for readers to get the gist of just how far afield some of the ‘facts’ are:

  • It all comes down to data scan rates per rack”: Would that it were true that all of data warehousing boiled down to full-stream data scans (as if the entire world of analytics relied on “select count(*) from lineitem” types of queries), then we could all measure “goodness” on how many GB/sec of data could be burst-scanned in our systems. But that’s not the case. So we build Netezza’s data and analytic appliances to deliver the best possible overall performance at the best price and power requirements. As a consequence, and following from those same numbers as-posted, a single rack of TwinFin can process (not just scan) about 400 million rows of data per second. That’s process, as in: “scan, decompress, project, restrict, AND join, etc.”. Need more processing firepower? Netezza’s system performance scales linearly with the addition of more S-Blades: at the low-end, the TwinFin 3 can deliver as much as 100M rows/second of processing horsepower, while the TwinFin 120 can provide you with 4 billion rows/second.  Does a system that still relies on using SMP-based servers running “plain old” Oracle 11g RAC scale similarly for data warehousing?


  • Non-open Linux running on FPGAs”: I’m really not sure what (if anything) was meant by this, but saying that Netezza’s FPGAs “are apparently running non-open Linux” is oxymoronic on at least two different levels (FPGAs don’t typically “run” an OS and, “non-open Linux” - really?)


  • User data & compresssion”: I also enjoyed the accounting of all that “user data” available to DBM users in the Oracle table and the various comments about compression. When Netezza quotes user data capacities in our systems, the numbers reflect real raw user data space, not space that will be further reduced because of required indexes in an attempt to boost performance. Furthermore, Netezza’s compression & decompression techniques allow us to extract “pure performance” from their use. By not relying on CPU cycles to decompress the data before we can process it any further, the FPGA engines decompress the data, on-the-fly, as fast as it streams off the disk drives. Can Oracle make either of those claims?


  • Tolerating node failures without downtime”: In perhaps the most bald-faced inaccuracy, the Oracle blog claimed, that Netezza “continues to lack the ability to tolerate node failures without downtime”. This I can only chock up to pure competitive “FUD-ism” as our capabilities in this area have been quite strong throughout the four generations of Netezza appliances and are further strengthened in TwinFin. Netezza is a fully-redundant system with no single point of failure, even in our smallest systems. Failover in the presence of failures of the disk drives, S-Blades, internal networking or host processors (in short, everything) is automatic and done in-service, with hot-swappable replacement throughout.


  • Appliance simplicity”: One thing Jean-Pierre didn’t address that might have been humorous to see his take on is the notion of “appliance simplicity” - basically the ability to build, support and maintain large to very large-sized data warehouses, with heavy workloads, with no or minimal tuning, partitioning, indexing or other “performance duct tape” required. Routinely, this capability in the Netezza systems is what delights our customers most and we have customers managing systems with several hundreds of terabytes of user data (not indexes + data, mind you - real data) with fractions of an FTE (full-time employee) devoted to them.


I hope that clears up some of the misconceptions. If any of Jean-Pierre's readers or Oracle customers would like to see or hear more about TwinFin for themselves, we definitely would invite them to come stop by our booth (#207) at
TDWI or come to one or our regional Enzee Universe events coming to a location near you.

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"You stay classy, San Diego." -- Ron Burgundy (Will Ferrell) in "Anchorman" (2004)Will Ferrell Anchorman.gif


This morning a few others from the Netezza Marketing and Product Management teams and I are ensconced by the Marina in sunny San Diego, CA for the TDWI World Conference and for an news announcement or two. And who better to bring us "Breaking News!" than the Number 1 newsman in all of San Diego, Ron Burgundy. [For those of you who might have been "hoping for more" from Ron in a quote about San Diego, you can check out the IMDB database for some great ones, including Ron's own historical (and hysterical) etymology for the city's name.]


BANNER_TwinFin_3.gif

 

Though it’s not exactly a state-secret at this point, today we’re launching the 4th generation of Netezza data warehouse and analytic appliances and the first of four initial product lines in it: TwinFin™.

 

TwinFin logo name.jpg

Some of the core characteristics of the TwinFin and the overall platform are:

  • Resetting Netezza’s price-performance leadership position in the market and extending Netezza’s performance lead;
  • Disrupting the competitive data warehouse market among the incumbents, just as we did with our initial systems in 2003/’04;
  • Moving to a commercially-available, blade-based server and storage platform; and
  • Opening Netezza’s aperture on the broader market with a multi-product platform design to match customers’ data warehouse and analytics needs across their enterprise


After the market disruption Netezza caused with the introduction of the NPS® in 2003 and since, we have seen the entry of dozens of new startups in our wake and virtually every major incumbent data warehouse vendor has retooled its portfolio to include a “response” to the Data Warehouse Appliance (DWA) in a suddenly reenergized market. Several of them, to their credit, have advanced their value propositions and improved their competitive position.


TwinFin Board Image.gifNow it is Netezza’s time once again. With the introduction of TwinFin and the other members of the new family of products, Netezza is once again changing the game; widening the applicability of our systems to more types of customers, applications and partners in the market.

As stated in
my response to Curt Monash, my response to Curt Monash last week, we think of this 4th generation of the Netezza appliance as using “the same architecture with a new physical implementation”. Starting with TwinFin, we moved to a commodity blade-server based system framework, but one that still uses Netezza’s “secret sauce” to deliver as much as a 5X increase in performance over the previous generation of Netezza systems, namely:

· our balanced design and streaming architecture;

· the use of Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) technology as a query processing “turbocharger”; and

· our advanced MPP management and optimization software.

 

And there are more innovations and performance gains on the way! TwinFin, quite simply, will serve as a platform for expanding Netezza’s performance and price-performance advantage in the industry and as the basis for advancing the state-of-the-art for in-database, analytically intensive data processing; all without sacrificing any of the appliance simplicity with which our company is synonymous.

As
a couple of us said last week, Netezza has served as “the benchmark” for high-performance DWA pricing in the industry and we are now leading “the market in pivoting to a new competitive price-performance level”. With these new systems, we have embraced a trend that has been happening around the industry – the movement of marginal cost of a bit of disk storage toward $0 – with system-sizing, pricing and even system numbering focused on the performance delivered by a given platform.

 

We think the net effect of the new, simplified pricing structure for TwinFin and the other members of the Netezza product family will create a major disruption in the market. With starting (US-based) prices that equate to under $20,000 per terabyte, TwinFin’s list price is a fraction of other competitors’ performance-system pricing (after they’re all done playing price-obfuscation games around mirror, swap and index storage).

 

TwinFin and the other new Netezza data and analytic appliance products give us the opportunity to continue to lead the market and provide our customers with the best value and performance possible for all of their data warehouse and analytic processing needs. Netezza TwinFin - because two fins are faster than one.

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