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In a nutshell, Netezza's current customers are buying up its TwinFin line and the company landed one transaction worth $14 million. In addition, Netezza raised its fiscal 2011 revenue growth ...
IBM can use Netezza to broaden its business analytics and data warehousing lineup and take out a competitor. IBM will pay $27 a share for Netezza, which closed Friday at $24.60.
Netezza on Monday plans to launch its latest data warehousing appliance, dubbed TwinFin. The appliance, the first in a family of them, promises to scale to a petabyte of data at a lower price point.
Jim Baum is Netezza’s President and CEO. He’s been with the company since 2006. And although he is incredibly passionate about his work, he’s equaliy as passionate about flying.
IBM announced today that it had finalized its acquisition of Marlboro-based business software company Netezza Corp. The deal was announced Sept. 20 and Netezza will be integrated into IBM’s ...
Data warehousing appliance vendor Netezza said Tuesday it has bought Tizor Systems, maker of data auditing and protection software. Terms were not disclosed. [ Learn how to secure your systems ...
Netezza Corporation, a provider of data warehouse and analytic appliances, has introduced the Netezza TwinFin appliance, the first in a family of new blade server-based appliances. The TwinFin ...
Jim Baum, president of IBM's Netezza unit, talks to eWEEK about how Netezza is addressing the issue of big data for Big Blue. He also said Netezza has blossomed since its acquisition in 2010.
IBM's Netezza division is rolling out a new analytic appliance that can analyze up to 10 petabytes of data "in a matter of minutes," the company is expected to announce Wednesday during the Enzee ...
Under the cash deal, IBM (IBM) will pay Netezza shareholders $27 per share, a 9.75% premium over the stock's Friday close. Netezza's stock soared 10.7% in premarket trading to $27.23 a share.