TransLattice

TransLattice
Industry Relational Database Management System (RDBMS)
Founded 2007
Headquarters Santa Clara, California, United States
Key people

Frank Huerta, Founder & CEO

Michael Lyle, Executive Vice President of Engineering and Co-Founder

Louise Funke, Vice President of Marketing

Melissa Conaulty, Vice President of Strategic Alliances
Products

TransLattice Elastic Database (TED)

TransLattice Application Platform (TAP)

TransLattice Application Kit (TAK)
Number of employees
20+
Website www.translattice.com

TransLattice is a software company based in Santa Clara, California. It geographically distributes databases and applications for enterprise, cloud and hybrid environments. TransLattice offers a NewSQL database and an application platform.

History

TransLattice was founded in 2007 and officially launched in 2010. The company co-founders are Frank Huerta, CEO, Mike Lyle, Executive VP of Engineering and Robert Geiger, who previously worked together at Recourse Technologies. TransLattice is based in Santa Clara, California.

In August 2008 the Company received $9.5 million in series A funding from DCM, an early stage capital venture funding company.[1]

Technology

TransLattice specializes in distributed databases and application platforms for enterprise and cloud IT systems.[2] The company has developed a geographically-distributed computing-architecture that allows a single database to run on multiple nodes located anywhere.[3]

The TransLattice Elastic Database (TED), a NewSQL database, enables the building of a "highly available, fault tolerant data fabric comprised of multiple nodes that can be located anywhere in the world".[2] The TransLattice database is fully SQL/ACID-compliant.[4] TED also ensures compliance with all federal laws - it operates as "a cohesive, single database".[5]

TransLattice provided the world's first geographically-distributed relational database management system (RDBMS) to deploy on multiple public-cloud-provider networks at the same time, as well as on virtual machines, physical hardware or any combination thereof.[6]

References

  1. Morgan, Timothy. "Postgres-on-steroids wields bare metal in Oracle, IBM skirmish." The Register. Jul. 24, 2012
  2. 1 2 Preimesberger, Chris. "Geography Plays Key Role in TransLattice Elastic Database." eWeek. Aug. 2, 2012
  3. Koetsier, John. "12 nodes, 5 continents, 1 database: TransLattice intros world’s first geographically distributed database." Venture Beat. Jul 24, 2012
  4. Matchett, Mike. "A SQL Sequel Called TED - the Distributed TransLattice Elastic Database." Taneja Blog. Aug. 7, 2012
  5. Crosman, Penny (2012-07-24). "TransLattice Pitches 'Elastic' Database to Give Global View of Customer Information". Bank Technology News. American Banker (SourceMedia). ISSN 0002-7561. Retrieved 2015-10-01. According to TransLattice, the Elastic Database it's announcing today is the first geographically distributed SQL database. 'We've put together a system that's able to combine resources and nodes from different regions containing different data into a cohesive, single database,' says CTO Mike Lyle.
  6. Gallagher, Matt. "TransLattice Becomes First Database System to Mix/Match Multiple Clouds." Red Herring. Feb. 25, 2013
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