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May 20, 2008 8:20 AM PDT

Aster Data Systems offers cluster for deep insights

by Dan Farber
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Taking a cue from Google, Aster Data Systems has come up with an massively parallel processing analytical engine and cluster of commodity hardware for extracting insight from hundreds of terabytes of data. MySpace has deployed 100 nodes of the Aster "nCluster" to load millions of rows per second to surface trends that can help the company fine-tune its services.

Aster nCluster nodes consist of 16GB of RAM, four 250GB SATA disks, and dual-processor quad-core Intel Xeon systems interconnected via 24-port 1Gb Ethernet switches. It works with the popular business intelligence and ETL tools, and it can talk to the standard relational databases.

The secret sauce, according to the company, is patent-pending algorithms and processes for partitioning, balancing, replication, and querying across nCluster. Pricing is based on the amount of customer data processed.

Aster's architecture is structured in independently scalable tiers, each of which adds a degree of freedom to the customer. The Aster Worker tier, where data is stored on locally attached disks, can be scaled to increase query performance and volume. The Aster Loader tier can scale independently to increase load throughput. This enables massively parallel processing for extraction and loading. Once the data is loaded, user queries are intelligently routed to each node to process only relevant data. This enables query load balancing to eliminate hot spots and increase performance, returning results in seconds or minutes versus hours (or incomplete results). Source: Aster Data Systems

In the tradition of Google, Yahoo, and other Silicon Valley start-ups, Aster was co-founded by three Stanford computer science Ph.D. students and funded by Silicon Valley VCs and angel investors.

Aster is entering a crowded field (see below), but its Google-like approach to data warehousing could reset expectations.

(Credit: Gartner)

See also: HP takes aim at Teradata with Neoview mousetrap

Dan Farber is editor in chief of CBS Interactive News, which includes CBSNews.com and CNET News. He has more than 25 years of experience as an editor and journalist covering technology. E-mail Dan.
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by dargon19888 May 20, 2008 9:23 AM PDT
"The secret sauce, according to the company, is patent-pending algorithms and processes for partitioning, balancing, replication, and querying across nCluster. Pricing is based on the amount of customer data processed."

You can't patent an algorithm. (It boils down that you can't patent mathematic equations.)
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by harbdavr May 22, 2008 5:31 PM PDT
Well I for one am excited to see a new entrant which offers something new to the space and can actually help deal with the problems the business faces. Data costs are out of control and ability to process quickly and imbed analytics while working with standard tool sets is an exciting development. The independence factor is also potentially very ground breaking and I would like to see more in depth reviews as this product develops.
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About Outside the Lines

Dan Farber is the editor in chief of CNET News. He has covered technology for more than two decades, and he previously served as editor in chief of ZDNet, PC Week and MacWeek. Outside the Lines explores the intersection of business and technology.

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