SAP on Monday announced a new family of products
that marry its Business Objects BI (business intelligence) software
with the Sybase IQ analytic database and include specialized business
content for use by various industries.
The four offerings include
BI suite, analytics edition; BI platform, analytics edition; Edge
analytics edition; and Crystal Server, analytics edition. The latter two
are mostly aimed at small and medium-size companies.
Along with
IQ, the bundles also include SAP Data Integrator for bringing
information into the system. In both cases, customers get a runtime-only
license, restricting IQ and Data Integrator's use to the analytic
applications in the bundle.
Overall, however, SAP has come up
with "very attractive" pricing for the four editions, with a roughly 20%
"uplift" for IQ and data integrator added to the base price of the
analytics software. said Paul Clark, senior director of analytics
marketing. Specific figures weren't available.
IQ is typically
licensed on a per-core basis, said Tom Traubitz, director of solution
marketing. While the runtime license has no restrictions on data storage
or the number of users, customers of the two lower-end packages are
limited to 16 cores, while the two higher-end options include 32 cores,
he said.
The downloadable business content is also included in
the packages' cost and it will "help customers get a jump-start" using
the software, according to Clark.
"The way it works is we look at
a business use case, based on a particular function in particular
industry," such as staff management in health care, Clark said. Then SAP
creates content, such as reports and dashboards, to fit the scenario,
he added.
While the analytics packages being sold for on-premises
use, SAP partners will probably offer hosted versions, according to
Clark.
From a strategic standpoint, the new bundles suggest that SAP remains committed to IQ, which was gained through the 2010 acquisition of Sybase, even as its homegrown HANA in-memory database becomes the company's focal point for both analytic and transaction processing workloads.
They
also give risk-averse customers an avenue for tackling more complex
data analysis jobs, rather than adopt HANA, which is still a fairly new
product.
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