Cloud or on-prem This big-data service now swings both ways
On Wednesday, BlueData announced that the software can now run on Amazon Web Services (AWS) and other public clouds, making it the first BDaaS platform to work both ways, the company says.
"The future of Big Data analytics will be neither 100 percent on-premises nor 100 percent in the cloud," said Kumar Sreekanti, CEO of BlueData. "We’re seeing more multicloud and hybrid deployments, with data both on-prem and in the cloud. BlueData provides the only solution that can meet the realities of these mixed environments in the enterprise.”
BlueData's EPIC (short for "Elastic Private Instant Clusters") platform taps embedded Docker container technology to let businesses spin up virtual Hadoop or Spark clusters within minutes on their existing infrastructure, the company says, giving data scientists on-demand access to the applications, data, and infrastructure.
BlueData has offered a free community edition of BlueData EPIC running on AWS since last year, but until now the enterprise edition was available only for on-premises deployments.
With the new flexibility to run in hybrid and multicloud environments, customers can eliminate data movement by keeping data on-premises while running compute in the cloud. At the same time, there's a "single pane of glass" for creating and managing big-data environments, BlueData says. The Docker images for Hadoop, Spark, and other big data applications will be the same regardless of the underlying infrastructure or cloud service.
As of Wednesday there's limited availability on AWS, with general availability there -– as well as on Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud Platform, and other public cloud services -– due in the coming months. Pricing on the public cloud will include usage-based and annual subscription options.
Also on Wednesday, BlueData introduced the summer release of its EPIC platform.
With roots at VMware, BlueData last year forged a partnership with Intel and announced a fresh $20 million in funding.
The BDaaS market is expected to be worth $7 billion by 2020, according to research firm MarketsandMarkets.