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GoldenGate Eases Data Synchronisation
By Graeme Burton
June 10, 2003
Article URL: http://www.infoconomy.com/pages/information-age/group79589.adp
When Tandem developer Eric Fish was given a project that involved synchronising large volumes of data between the databases of various Tandem machines, he was more than a little daunted.
The Tandem database is optimised for the storage of data, rather than fast retrieval, and the machines could not be taken down overnight.
Fish's solution was the Global Data Synchronisation platform, a tool that sits in front of the database, intercepts incoming data and replicates it so that it can be stored in
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Company: GoldenGate
Main activity: Data synchronisation software
Founded: 1995
CEO: Mike Seashols
HQ: Sausalito, California
Status: Privately held. $23 million in venture capital raised from Summit Partners in April 2002.
Key competitors: Ascential
Infoconomy comment: GoldenGate's software provides a long-overdue solution to many common IT problems. However, there is a risk that it could soon be eclipsed by the XML-based federated database technology being developed by Oracle, Microsoft and others.
www.goldengate.com
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multiple databases - all without affecting performance or requiring any downtime.
That was in 1995. Today, the company's software supports a wide range of databases - not just Oracle, but virtually everything from IMS to MySQL - and runs on some 12 platforms, including Linux.
The company has been profitable from day one, due to a lucrative early sale to ACI Worldwide, which supplies the software that runs cash machine networks in the US. However, that early success also engendered a degree of complacency.
It was only in 2000 that Fish approached venture capital firm Summit Partners, secured $23 million in funding and recruited a 'professional' management team, including industry veteran Mike
Seashols as CEO.
At the same time, the software was polished into a more professional product, support for more databases was added and the management features improved so that users can set up data flows according to business processes using a graphical user interface.
Now, says senior vice president Larry Wilk, customers such as the Alliance and Leicester, Citicorp, Dell and the Link cash machine network in the UK are using it for a wide range of tasks.
These include disaster recovery and business continuity, data warehousing and even customer relationship management - any application that requires the same data to be used in two or more
systems at once.
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