News

Time and again SAP ( SAP) has announced that its in-memory is a disruptive technology, which speeds up data storage and retrieval to unprecedented speeds. Traditionally SAP competes with Oracle ...
Perhaps most significant is the news that SAP HANA stands as the world’s largest in-memory database. It can handle ten billion records, 100 terabytes of data and 200 million query responses.
SAP has talked about in-memory databases for years, but is now ready to push the technology into enterprises on a pilot basis. Is it a game changer?
Companies that run SAP’s applications should know that most of those applications can perform much better on Oracle Database than on any other database platform, including HANA.
SAP seems to be betting its future on its HANA in-memory database, spotlighting the technology once again at the Sapphire conference in Orlando Wednesday, announcing a slew of new applications ...
SAP plans to roll out support for the ERP module within its flagship Business Suite product family on the HANA in-memory database platform in the fourth quarter ...
Users now can use SAP applications alongside Oracle Database In-Memory to perform real-time data analytics to go with real-time transaction processing.
Software vendor SAP has certified Oracle Database In-Memory for use with SAP NetWeaver 7 applications. Oracle Database In-Memory was announced at Oracle Open World 2013 and released in the middle ...
SAP seems to be betting its future on its HANA in-memory database, spotlighting the technology once again at the Sapphire conference in Orlando Wednesday, announcing a slew of new applications ...
SAP is planning to announce new hardware appliances for its in-memory database technology.
More details emerged Wednesday about SAP’s plans to build new in-memory database appliances for high-speed analytics, which could set the vendor up against platforms like Oracle’s Exadata. SAP ...
SAP is planning to work with partners to develop new hardware appliances that employ its in-memory database technology that could potentially serve as rivals to Oracle's Exadata data-processing ...