I spent all of last week traveling
through Europe – meeting with open source partners and speaking with analysts and press about
all-things business intelligence and open source. It was truly “trains, planes, and
automobiles”, with a few city buses tossed in for complexity. In total, a very valuable trip,
though. As example, I met with John Powell, CEO of Alfresco (www.alfresco.com). We swapped successes and concerns and I was
thrilled to learn that, like Jaspersoft, this open source content management leader is doing very well,
despite the vex-some global economy (or perhaps because of the vex-some global
economy?).
My primary task in travel, though, was
to amplify the important announcements that have occurred for Jaspersoft and the world of open source
business intelligence . . . no doubt you’ve already stitched together the theme. Just in case,
I’ll spell it all out for you here briefly.
First, in mid-August, we debuted a
remarkable demonstration of our technology integrated with Infobright’s Brighthouse product -
which runs atop MySQL – and provides an optimized, columnar-oriented data warehouse
engine. Key to this demonstration is the expertise at OpenBI, one of our most highly-skilled open
source BI consulting partners (www.openbi.com). For
unmatched scalability and value, this combination of products is truly second-to-none. Check
this out at the on-demand webinar section of our web site (http://www.jaspersoft.com/nw_events1.html).
Second, earlier this month, Jaspersoft
and Infobright (www.infobright.com) announced a bundle of open
source (Community Edition) software to dramatically alter the value delivered in this
arena. Specifically, the two companies “today announced plans to deliver a joint end-to-end
open source BI and data warehouse solution, available as a JasperForge project. JasperForge.org is
the largest open source community portal with hundreds of projects for the Jaspersoft Business
Intelligence Suite. The new joint project bundle will be based on Jaspersoft and several Sun open source
products, as well as the new open source data warehouse software, Infobright Community Edition (ICE). This
enterprise-class, self-managing solution is a proven alternative to today’s high-cost,
high-maintenance data warehouse products.”
So, at this point, the stage seems set
. . . and our focus on delivering valuable, scalable open source BI for even sophisticated data
warehouse-based projects is obvious. But then, this week, we added even more mettle to this equation by
extending our partnership with Talend, the leading commercial open source data integration
company.
For nearly two years, Talend (www.talend.com) has been behind our JasperETL product, which enables
the simple and quick construction of data warehouses and data marts so that data can be fully utilized by
JasperServer and JasperAnalysis.In summary, we announced that we have extended our partnership agreement
by developing an entirely new version of the JasperETL solution, designed specifically to include the
features most used by Jaspersoft’s BI customers. Powered by Talend, this JasperETL package
will combine the elements of Talend Integration Suite that are the most relevant for BI users, and will
meet Jaspersoft customers’ requests for an ETL capability that delivers more power and
flexibility in their BI deployments. The new version of JasperETL will be offered exclusively from
Jaspersoft and will be included in every paid subscription of the Jaspersoft BI suite.
Renewing and extending our agreement
with Talend seemed perfectly appropriate under the backdrop of the Paris Capitale du Libre event, which
was held this week in Paris. My last post cited the fantastic progress and momentum that open source
(and Jaspersoft) is seeing in Europe. So lastly, I’ll simply encourage you to read our press
release (dated September 24) to learn more about our customer and community traction in the Euro
Zone: http://www.jaspersoft.c
om/nw_press_jaspersoft_translates_european_roots.html
"JasperReports turned out to be the best tool and a great aid for getting great reports. It also gave my bosses the vision to base much more of the decision making based on the reports I made. "