Posts Tagged ‘Mike Personick’

SemTechBiz DC is Almost Here – with New Program Additions

SemTechBiz, Washington DC - November 29 - December 1, 2011

The 2011 Semantic Technology & Business Conference will land in Washington, DC in less than two weeks. The conference – which will take place at the Kellogg Conference Hotel from November 29-December 1, 2011 – is still making exciting additions to the already impressive roster of speakers and presentations. Recently, we have added top execs from such cutting-edge companies as Revelytix, Orbis, Veda, Phasic Systems, and Systap — they will be on hand to share their insights and reveal the latest developments in the world of Semantic Web Technologies.
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Semantic Tech & Business Conference Returns to San Francisco

Semantic Tech & Business Conference returns to San Francisco in June! Join us from June 3-7 for complete coverage of Big Data, Linked Data, Extreme Information Management, and Semantic Web. From breakthrough approaches to solving business problems to the big data implications of fast–evolving technologies, SemTechBiz provides you with an unparalleled interactive experience and delivers tangible business value. We're offering a special early rate when you register by February 17. Sign up now!

Bigdata® is Breaking Down Barriers in Semantic Web Database Size and Throughput

SAN JOSE, CA, June 17, 2009 – SYSTAP, LLC, a boutique software consultancy, announced today that its open-source, distributed RDF database “bigdata®” has broken through significant barriers in semantic web database size and throughput, loading 12.7 Billion RDF statements with peak load rates of up to 300,000 statements per second and sub-second query times. This is the highest throughput rate reported so far anywhere in the world.

“We are very excited about the results we are seeing” says Mike Personick, SYSTAP principal and co-architect of bigdata®. “We are consistently seeing test runs of over 10 Billion statements, and we are just now starting to see throughput rates that get us to 1 Billion statements in under one hour. You cannot touch performance like that on a single machine for anything near the same cost. Commodity hardware is cheap and scale-out approaches let you make the most of it.”

Bryan Thompson, the lead architect of bigdata®, has been testing and tuning the RDF database on a 15-blade commodity cluster since early January. “Theoretical scaling limits are meaningless,” says Thompson, “Until you run the numbers you can’t be certain how a database will react to very big data sets.”

RDF is a Semantic Web technology and W3C standard for encoding knowledge into statements or “triples”. Personick: “RDF databases are ideally suited to on-demand federation and semantic alignment of heterogeneous data sets in a world with no universal schema. What makes these results so exciting is that our customers can now tackle these sorts of problems at very large scale.” Mr. Personick will be speaking about bigdata® at SemTech 2009 in San Jose, CA.