Adobe gulps Omniture

Another analytics takeover. Adobe needing to do something exciting and cash generating made a smart play with a 50 % premium for Omniture- with the amount of web traffic that adobe is embedded into (from documents ,graphics and videos especially) Adding in analytics can only mean better growth prospects for both given the pressure they are likely to face soon from competing products ( MS Silverlight and Yahoo Index Tools, Google Analytics respectively).

From the Press Release (note the cute diagram)

Adobe to Acquire Omniture

On Sept. 15, 2009, Adobe Systems Incorporated (Nasdaq:ADBE) and Omniture, Inc.                 (Nasdaq:OMTR) announced the two companies have entered into a definitive agreement                               for Adobe to acquire Omniture in a transaction valued at approximately $1.8 billion on a                          fully diluted equity-value basis. Under the terms of the agreement, Adobe will commence                                a tender offer to acquire all of the outstanding common stock of Omniture for $21.50   

per share in cash.

Adobe’s acquisition of Omniture furthers its mission to revolutionize the way the world engages             with ideas and information. By combining Adobe’s content creation tools and ubiquitous                     clients with Omniture’s Web analytics, measurement and optimization technologies, Adobe will be well positioned to deliver solutions that can transform the future of engaging experiences and e-commerce across all   digital content, platforms and devices.

Adobe and Omniture

The combination of the two companies will increase the value Adobe delivers to customers.                     For designers, developers and online marketers, an integrated workflow—with optimization   capabilities embedded in the creation tools—will streamline the creation and delivery of                relevant content and applications. This optimization will enable advertisers and advertising       agencies, publishers,  and e-tailers to realize greater ROI from their digital media investments                  and improve their end users’ experience

And the official fact sheet

ADOBE

  1. FOUNDED: 1982
  2. PRESIDENT & CEO: Shantanu Narayen
  3. MARKET CAP: $18.19 billion (as of 9/11/09)
  4. FY 08 REVENUE: US $3.58 billion (FYE Nov. 28, 2008)

Omniture

  1. CO-FOUNDER & CEO: Josh James
  2. FOUNDED: 1996
  3. MARKET CAP: $1.29 billion (as of 9/11/09)
  4. FY 08 REVENUE: US $295.6 million (FYE Dec. 31, 2008)

From-

http://www.adobe.com/aboutadobe/invrelations/adobeandomniture.html

Open Source Computing: Open CL

Here is a great presentation from the Khronos group on the new Apple sponsored open source language.
http://www.khronos.org/opencl/

OpenCL – The open standard for parallel programming of heterogeneous systems”

OpenCL™ is the first open, royalty-free standard for cross-platform, parallel programming of modern processors found in personal computers, servers and handheld/embedded devices. OpenCL (Open Computing Language) greatly improves speed and responsiveness for a wide spectrum of applications in numerous market categories from gaming and entertainment to scientific and medical software. OpenCL supports a wide range of applications, from embedded and consumer software to HPC solutions, through a low-level, high-performance, portable abstraction. By creating an efficient, close-to-the-metal programming interface, OpenCL will form the foundation layer of a parallel computing ecosystem of platform-independent tools, middleware and applications.

OpenCL is being created by the Khronos Group with the participation of many industry-leading companies and institutions including 3DLABS, Activision Blizzard, AMD, Apple, ARM, Broadcom, Codeplay, Electronic Arts, Ericsson, Freescale, Fujitsu, GE, Graphic Remedy, HI, IBM, Intel, Imagination Technologies, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Motorola, Movidia, Nokia, NVIDIA, Petapath, QNX, Qualcomm, RapidMind, Samsung, Seaweed, S3, ST Microelectronics, Takumi, Texas Instruments, Toshiba and Vivante.

Presenting R

Here is a short presentation I made for fellow students at work.

It is generally at a beginner’s level or for people having trouble transitioning to R.

and if you want to see the video presentation you can see it from here on UTK’s lecture capture mechanism

Title: R Help Session
Speaker: A. Ohri
Desription: Session for R Beginners
URL: http://vcweb.bus.utk.edu/20090911-103113-cap403/

In addition, here is a link for the handout:

https://docs.google.com/present/edit?id=0AdYMMvghK2ytZGN2c3MzNThfODA2ZzY4N2I5bno&hl=en&invite=CKvforMH

Oracle announces Oracle Database 11g Release 2

Here is the product release site for 11g http://www.oracledatabase11g.com/ As per Oracle communication it continues to be the undisputed leader in big data batabase category.

Some other product features/ claims-

The Oracle Database Machine and Oracle Exadata Storage Server use intelligent storage software to process queries in the storage layer and get answers at least 10 times faster than before.

Oracle Database 11g Release 2 drives down hardware costs by enabling consolidation in a shared computing environment—and reaping the price and performance advantages of commodity hardware. The edition based redefinition feature lets you upgrade applications while users remain connected to their business applications.

oracle

And interestingly

It includes numerous automations and advisors that help double database administrators’ productivity over previous releases.

Claims of 10X, and 100% productivity always enhance the statistical thinking in my head. Did the new software really do so much improvement or was the earlier release just plain daffy. Good software can rarely go up 10X faster and 100% more productivity in a single release.

However, Oracle continues to be number 1 as of now-

Two analyst firms recently published their market share numbers for 2008, both finding Oracle continues to lead the industry, topping Gartner’s 2008 Worldwide RDBMS Market Share Report with 48.9 percent share, and leading IDC’s 2008 Worldwide Data Warehouse Platform Software 2008 Vendor Shares report with 40 percent share.

Interview Jeff Bass, Bass Institute (Part 2)

During the 1980’s and early 1990’s, the Bass Institute managed to attract a loyal following with it’s SAS language compiler, ultimately bowing to the financial pressures and technological pressures of the move to the Desktop. In the year 2009, as SAS language gains a new compiler in terms of the WPS, AND computing paradigms begin to shift to cloud computing from the desktop- Jeff Bass, founder of Bass Institute and genius tech coder brings a perspective rich in experience.

If we don’t learn from history, we are condemned to repeat it.

Ajay- Describe your career in science. How would you motivate children in class rooms today to be as excited about science as the moon generation was?

J Bass- My graduate training was in economics and statistics.  I have used that training in ways that I would never have anticipated when I was in graduate school 30 years ago.  But it is still exciting for me.  I started out building microeconomic models, then went on to write statistical language compliers and build health policy macroeconomic models.  These days I develop and articulate health policy to help increase patient’s access to cutting edge medicines.  The company I work for now is very science based and even applies scientific thinking, measurement and testing of alternatives in the business side of its operations.

I spend volunteer time as a guest teacher at local middle schools, high schools and community colleges.  I often talk about math and statistics and have found that one way to help motivate students is to give them “fun” example problems.  I often use an example of the 1969 lunar orbital calculations to motivate basic trigonometry and quite a number of students who say they don’t like math end up loving solving parts of that problem.  I think our school curriculums need to come up with problems and examples that the students find interesting.  I’m not sure our existing curricula processes make this an easy thing to do.  All too often we teach techniques without combining that teaching with strong motivating examples that make learning fun.

Ajay-  What are the changes in paradigms that you have seen across the decades? What are the key insights and summaries that you can provide.

J Bass- Our increasing understanding of biology and DNA is a major paradigm shift that is combining molecular biology and protein chemistry with computer science.  Identifying the human DNA sequence was only the beginning.  Imagine that you were handed the bit sequence of a CD-ROM and were told to figure out what parts of it were a text document, what parts were a JPEG photograph and what parts were an MP3 music file – if you did NOT know the coding schemes of such files.  That’s analogous to where we are today with DNA sequences…we know the ATCG sequence, but we are only scratching the surface of understanding the things that the DNA sequence codes for – proteins, cell metabolism, differentiating cell reproduction. Continue reading “Interview Jeff Bass, Bass Institute (Part 2)”

SPSS /PASW Certification – Free until Sept 15

SPSS is launching their certification series online. You can qualify for a free Level 1certification as a beta tester til September 15.

If you know Level 1 SPSS, this is a very good chance to earn some resume glitter.

Go to
http://www.spss.com/certification/

spss

Note from Jon Peck- SPSS’s top technie

SPSS is starting a certification program for PASW Statistics…

In response to extensive user feedback, SPSS is pleased to introduce its first software certification program: the PASW Statistics (Level I) Exam. Earning your certification in PASW Statistics will give you an edge that will distinguish you from your peers. And, because SPSSInc.’s Predictive Analytics solutions are recognized globally, you can be sure that the PASW Statistics credential will carry the same significance wherever your career takes you.

The program is now in beta test.  The test fee is being waived if you register and complete the Level I exam as a beta participant

enter promo code SPSSBetaL1ED / SPSSBetaL1 and contact Certification@spss.com

Interview Merv Adrian IT Market Strategy

An interview with renowned technology analyst Merv Adrian is as follows. Mr Adrian has spent three decades in IT industry and has also served as SVP at Forrester Research, and now is founder of IT Market Strategy. Merv talks on his views on technology and how he sees the next big tech trends coming.

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Ajay- Describe your career in science and technology. What do you think is the best thing that science careers offer to people.

Merv- I wouldn’t characterize myself as having worked in science – even computer science implies a direction quite different from my own. I began as a statistician, and after getting the opportunity to learn some computer skills, spent a number of years coding a variety of decision support and data integration programs. I joined the software industry as a technical journal editor, and held a variety of marketing, strategy and analyst relations positions before beoming an industry analyst.

Ajay-  With your background in finance, how do you think the next generation of financial reporting systems should be built for early warning signals of crisis. Due to think predictive analytics can play a bigger role than just traditional reporting and metric aggregation.

Merv- We’re already seeing greater specialization in financial applications that provide context: an understanding of the industry the firm is in, and its special requirements for industry standards, compliance, etc. This added specific depth and breadth, combined with increasing sophistication in pre-built models for predictive analytics and access to hitherto unavailable volumes of historical data, will extend the reach of applications used by financial professionals. Guided analysis and advanced visualization will make more sophisticated tools available and understandable, promoting more awareness of impending problems and recommending courses of action.

Ajay- What tips would you like to give to aspiring analysts or science journalists and bloggers. What are the top 5 things do’s /don’ts that you refer to while writing a report or analysis.

Merv-

* Never stop learning, and never assume you know enough. Be humble enough to acknowledge that the person you talk to may have something to teach you – and ask about anything you hear that you don’t understand.

* Remember your audience. If you don’t know who you’re writing for, how can you decide what matters to them?

* Explain why what you’re saying matters, and to whom. Don’t assume your readers know.

* Be clear about what is new or changed. If it’s business as usual, there should be a good reason to write about it – maybe change was expected but is slow in coming.

* Acknowledge your sources and collaborators. Be generous with credit.

Ajay- Recently some BI Analyst firms saw the departure of star analysts to found their own firm. How do you think tech companies can manage the retention of talented people especially those who become a bigger brand than they were originally supposed to.

Merv- I’m assuming you want the response to refer to analyst firms. “Bigger than they were originally supposed to” is not an accurate way to describe the sitution.

Analyst firms don’t put a ceiling on their employees’ brand building; quite the contrary. They train them, give them a platform, and sustain them as they do so. Nonetheless, the firm’s brand, not the individual analyst’s brand, is what matters to them.

In general, the big ones don’t care about retaining people. They believe they can easily replace them, and history shows that they recover well from such departures.

Ajay- What incentives apart from the usual financial ones can help build a culture of intrapreneurship in which employees help build startups within the parent firm.

Merv- You can’t leave finances out of it. The business model that has been shown to work for intrapreneurs is partnership, where the partners share significantly in successful practices they build and deliver.

In consulting firms, if you build a practice, you benefit from its success. Analyst firms are increasingly making consulting part of the analyst job description, but the big ones have not made any moves to institute a partner-style model. So to your point, those who build their own brand successfully are likely to leave.

They become entrepreneurs, not intrapreneurs.

Ajay- What are your views on the next 12 months in terms of technology and BI industry dynamics. What is your wishlist- the top three things that you wish happen in the field of technology.

Merv-

* We’re entering a period of great ferment in data management as a set of upstarts has had early success with specialized analytic database platforms. As spending rebounds, most will see their momentum continue. Several have new funding, strong management teams, and early successes to build on.

* The rest of BI will see similar expansion. BI is a perennial growth market and it’s not about to slow down – predictive analytics, advanced visualization, more spohisticated and widespread use of text analytics, and the movement to SaaS models will play a role.

* True analytic applications, as described above in a financial context, will also continue their momentum. You’ll see them in other places, from manufacturing to retail, as micro-verticalization and the proliferation of templated best business practice models roll out form the largest players.

Those are both predictions and a wish list – they move us closer to delivering on the promise of having computing power help us improve business results. There are many more changes coming in packaging, licensing, the emergence of dramatically more powerful hardware platforms – but that’s business as usual. The aging server population will need replacement, and the rebound will be substantial, hastening the generational shift. And a skills shortage will re-accelerate the growth of offshoring. The next decade will be transformational in many ways.

Ajay- How does Merv Adrian balance his work and home life? How important is work life balance in this profession and do you think younger analysts sometimes dont pay attention to it.

Merv- As a manager, I always did my best to remind analysts working for me to leave time for the things that define us a humans – family, friends and faith. What we leave behind will be there, not in our reports, no matter how good they are. We all find ourselves consumed by our work, and social media exacerbates the situation unless we build in ways to be human too.

Youth will always be in a hurry, but the natural maturation process usually works out fine. Where I see balance begin to reassert itself is usually in the family – when your kids arrive, you must stop and remember to be there for them. You mustn’t delegate that one – nobody has ever looked back at their life and said “I wish I had spent less time with my kids.”

Thanks for asking, Ajay. My final thought is that all this guidance is aspirational; I struggle for balance every day. Sometimes I do pretty well at it,and often I fall short. I try to keep my values firmly in mind and strive to live up to them, as we all do.

Analyst and consultant Merv Adrian founded IT Market Strategy after three decades in the IT industry. During his tenure as Senior Vice President at Forrester Research, he was responsible for all of Forrester’s technology research, and covered the software industry. Earlier, as Vice President at Giga Information Group, Merv focused on facilitating collaborative research and covered data management and middleware. Prior to becoming an analyst, Merv was Senior Director, Strategic Marketing at Sybase, where he also held director positions in data warehouse marketing and analyst relations

For more on Merv’s views you can go here

Merv’s B-Eye Network channel at http://www.b-eye-network.com/channels/5097/
Blog: http://mervadrian.wordpress.com
Twitter: merv