• Jump to Left Menu
  • Jump to Right Menu
  • Jump to Main Content
  • Jump to Footer
  • Accessibility Page
IT-Director.com Logo

 

Main navigation - go to a section of this website:

  • ARCHIVE
  • PAPERS
  • EVENTS
  • NEWSWIRE
  • BLOGS

  

Register | Login to Member's Area

 
 
DOMAINS
  • Enterprise
  • SME
  • Business Issues
  • Technology
  • Services
  • Channels
FEATURED EVENTS
  • Information Process Quality Improvement
    19th March - 21st March
    London, United Kingdom
  • Convergence Summit North 2012
    17th April - 18th April
    Manchester, United Kingdom
POPULAR PAPERS
  • Best practices for cloud security by Bloor Research
USEFUL LINKS
  • Last 7 Days
  • Archives
  • Top Articles
SHARE THIS PAGE
  • Delicious Icon Delicious
  • Digg Icon Digg
  • reddit Icon reddit
  • Facebook Icon Facebook
  • StumbleUpon Icon StumbleUpon
CONTENT FEED

Sitewide
RSS Feed:

RSS Icon

What is RSS?

RANDOM QUOTE
Famous Slights - "I like long walks, especially when they are taken by people who annoy me." - Fred Allen

PAGE TOOLS
  • Request Reprints
  • Tell A Friend
  • Contact Author
RECENT POSTS
  • Cassandra and Hadoop
  • Another choice for Hadoop
  • Informatica Data Replication
  • Hive, DataRush and Hadoop
  • Challenging Cloudera
  • The EDW is dead
ADVERTISEMENT
BLOG ARCHIVE
  • January, 2012
  • October, 2011
  • August, 2011
  • June, 2011
  • April, 2011
  • March, 2011
  • February, 2011
  • January, 2011
  • November, 2010
  • October, 2010
  • September, 2010
  • August, 2010
Blogs > Bloor IM Blog

SnapLogic

Philip Howard By: Philip Howard, Research Director - Data Management, Bloor Research
Published: 24th December 2009
Copyright Bloor Research © 2009
Logo for Bloor Research

Data integration tools are a dime a dozen and there are more open source data integration tools that you can shake a fist at. In part, this is because there remains a large untapped market potential for data integration, with lots of companies still insisting that they can do it better and more effectively by hand coding (they can’t).

SnapLogic is an open source data integration vendor founded in 2006 by Gaurav Dhillon, the erstwhile co-founder and CEO of Informatica, so he knows a thing or two about both start-ups and data integration. What’s different about SnapLogic is its focus on web-based sources of data, so that it will support integration not only with SaaS providers but also rich web content and even things like Twitter and YouTube plus, of course, conventional sources like Oracle and MySQL.

However, it’s not really SnapLogic as a data integration vendor that I want to talk about. While the company will claim technical and cost advantages, and it is doing something a bit different in so far as data integration is concerned, with its emphasis on web sources of data, what is very different is SnapStore, which was launched last month and will go into beta in February next year.

The basic idea behind SnapStore is that there are far too many data sources for any one data integration vendor to provide a connector for every such source and when you start to consider combinations of sources with targets then that number increases exponentially. Of course, the major vendors cover the leading databases, ERP systems and so forth but there are lots of obscure and not so obscure environments that they probably don’t, even at the connector level. For example, when did you last hear a vendor talking about its Revelation database connector? Or, to take something more well known: its Sage connector? or its Zoho CRM connector?

The idea behind SnapStore is that you provide facilities for creating snaps, where a snap is anything from a simple connector to a complete dataflow that integrates (say) a SalesForce quote with a NetSuite order. Then you encourage developers to create such connectors, not just for their own purposes (which they need to do anyway) but also to share those connectors within the SnapStore. However, this isn’t just an open source junky type of sharing. Connectors are tested and certified before being placed in the SnapStore and developers are credited with 70% of the revenues accruing from any subsequent licensing of those connectors.

It is early days of course but one can see that this might really drive the development of snaps. And if it does then SnapLogic will become better and better placed as it builds up a larger and larger library of snaps. After all, why reinvent the wheel when SnapLogic can already provide it?

Reader Comments

The messages above were all contributed by IT-Director.com readers. Whilst we take care to remove any posts deemed inappropriate, we can take no responsibility for these comments. If you would like a comment removed please contact our editorial team.

We automatically stop accepting comments 180 days after a post is published. If you would like to know more about this subject, please contact us and we'll try to help.



  • Report errors / Make Suggestions
  • | Site Map
  • | Terms of Use
  • | Privacy

Published by: IT Analysis Communications Ltd.
T: +44 (0)190 888 0760 | F: +44 (0)190 888 0761