
Netezza
Company providing optimized data warehouse applications for companies to store vast amounts of information.
Date | Investors | Amount | Round |
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- | investor | €0.0 | round |
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investor investor investor investor | €0.0 | round | |
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N/A | €0.0 Valuation: €0.0 | round | |
$1.7b Valuation: $1.7b | Acquisition | ||
Total Funding | 000k |







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Netezza pioneered the data warehouse appliance market, offering a specialized system for high-performance data analytics. Founded as Intelligent Data Engines, Inc. in December 1999 by Foster Hinshaw, the company rebranded to Netezza Corporation in November 2000 when co-founder Jit Saxena joined. Hinshaw, known as the "Father of Data Warehouse Appliances," provided the technical vision, while Saxena, a serial entrepreneur who previously founded and took public the software firm Applix, brought executive leadership. Saxena, an alumnus of IIT Mumbai with an MBA from Boston University, had a track record of building successful tech companies. Hinshaw conceived of a dedicated appliance to overcome the data analysis bottlenecks of general-purpose computer systems.
The company's core business revolved around selling integrated hardware and software appliances designed to analyze petabyte-scale data volumes significantly faster than traditional systems. The business model focused on providing a complete, easy-to-manage system that combined a database, server, and storage, thereby reducing setup time and the need for extensive IT administration. This approach catered to large enterprises across various sectors, including retail, financial services, telecommunications, and healthcare, with clients like Neiman Marcus, Time Warner, and eHarmony. Netezza's initial public offering took place in July 2007 on the NYSE Arca. A significant milestone occurred on September 20, 2010, when IBM announced its acquisition of Netezza for approximately $1.7 billion in cash, a deal that closed in November 2010.
Netezza's flagship product was its data warehouse appliance, which evolved through several generations, such as the TwinFin. The system's key differentiator was its proprietary Asymmetric Massively Parallel Processing (AMPP) architecture. This two-tiered system utilized a Linux-based host to divide complex queries into smaller, parallel tasks called snippets. These snippets were then distributed to numerous specialized processing nodes, known as S-Blades. Each S-Blade featured standard CPUs combined with custom Field-Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs), which filtered irrelevant data directly from the disk at hardware speeds. This massively parallel design, which processed data close to the storage, allowed for rapid query execution without the need for extensive tuning or indexing that conventional databases required. Post-acquisition, IBM integrated Netezza's technology into its own portfolio, rebranding it as IBM PureData for Analytics and later evolving it into the Netezza Performance Server, available both on-premises and as a cloud service on platforms like AWS and Azure.
Keywords: data warehouse appliance, big data analytics, massively parallel processing, MPP, Asymmetric Massively Parallel Processing, AMPP, Field-Programmable Gate Arrays, FPGA, business intelligence, Jit Saxena, Foster Hinshaw, IBM PureData for Analytics, Netezza Performance Server, data analytics, petabyte scale, query performance, enterprise data warehousing, advanced analytics, in-database analytics, data filtering, S-Blade, snippet processing, low total cost of ownership, high-performance computing, data appliance, IBM acquisition, data storage solutions, cloud data warehousing, hybrid data platform
Investments by Netezza
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