Another Word For It Patrick Durusau on Topic Maps and Semantic Diversity

December 2, 2011

Infinitegraph 2.0

Filed under: Graphs,InfiniteGraph,NoSQL — Patrick Durusau @ 4:56 pm

Infinitegraph 2.0

From the product page:

InfiniteGraph helps organizations find the valuable relationships within their data. Our product is unique in its ability to leverage distributed data and processes, which yields reduced time and costs while maximizing overall performance on big data.

No other graph database technology available today can match InfiniteGraph’s combined strengths of persisting and traversing complex relationships requiring multiple hops, across vast and distributed data stores.

But here is more important information (Objectivity, Inc. is the owner of Infinitegraph 2.0):

Objectivity, Inc., the leader in distributed, scalable data management solutions, today announced that Government Security News (GSN) has named its flagship database, Objectivity/DB, as winner of its annual Homeland Security Awards program in the “Best Intelligence Data Fusion and Collaborative Analysis Solution” category. The annual GSN Homeland Security Awards program celebrates the ongoing public-private partnership between all branches of Federal, state and local government in the United States and the private sector vendors of IT security, whose combined efforts successfully defend and protect the nation’s people, property and way of life. Click here for a list of awards categories and finalists, as well as for more information on GSN’s Homeland Security Awards.

“GSN is an authoritative source of news and information on all aspects of homeland security, and we are honored to be recognized by their esteemed panel of judges,” said Jay Jarrell, president and CEO of Objectivity, Inc. “This award is a testament to our leadership in the government sector, and underscores how agencies like the U.S. Air Force’s Network Centric Collaborative Targeting System (NCCT), Analyst Support Architecture (ASA) and the U.S. Navy’s Broad Area Maritime Surveillance (BAMS) Unmanned Aircraft System (UAS) program are leveraging Objectivity/DB to power distributed mission critical intelligence data fusion and collaborative analysis.”

Note that I corrected the first link in the first paragraph to point to the news of the award dinner. BTW, Netwitness and Overwatch Textron Systems were also winners in the “Best Intelligence Data Fusion and Collaborative Analysis Solution” category. Both worth your attention as well.

In terms of seeking an audience to discuss homeland security solutions, I think basing your approach on award winning software would be a good idea.

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