

What a year to make a comeback. After a four-year hiatus, the Vertica Big Data Conference was all set to return this month, until the novel coronavirus came along.
The rapidly spreading virus has caused an unprecedented number of cancellations of in-person events impacting every industry, from sports games to film festivals to technology conferences. Instead of letting the COVID-19 virus stop the Vertica Big Data Conference dead in its tracks, however, Vertica (a division of Micro Focus International PLC) has rapidly pivoted to a digital format and is already seeing great interest.
“We’ve seen the registration spike,” said Jeff Healey, senior director of Vertica product marketing at Micro Focus in a recent interview with Dave Vellante, host of theCUBE, SiliconANGLE Media’s livestreaming mobile studio. “We just hit 1,000, and we’re planning on having about 1,000 at the physical event. It’s growing and growing. We’re going to see those big numbers, and it’s not going to be a one-time thing.”
Recorded from the safety of remote locations, Healey and Vellante discussed expectations for the upcoming digital conference, scheduled for March 31-April 1, how Vertica will retain its event’s uniquely engineer-centric vibe, and how the company has risen to the challenges of market changes in big data since its inception nearly 15 years ago. (* Disclosure below.)
While many tech conferences traditionally feature plenty of company hype and sales and marketing presentations, Vertica’s Big Data Conference focuses strictly on applied use cases and real-world insights into how data is transforming the enterprise, fully shining the spotlight on engineers and practitioners. Featured topics during this year’s digital event include “Creating Predictive Models to Maximize Clinical System Availability,” “End-to-End Security,” “Putting Complex Data Types to Work,” and “The Road to Autonomous Database Management.”
The global big data and business analytics market continues to trend upward, moving from $122 billion in 2015 to $171 billion in 2018 — and this number is projected to hit $512 billion by 2026, according to a recent market research report from Allied Market Research. “Surge in adoption of big data analytics software by multiple organizations, and rise in demand for cloud-based big data analytics software among SMEs fuel the growth of the global big data and business analytics market,” according to the report.
The competition in the market has remained fierce over the past decade, with many big data startups failing or being gobbled up and integrated into existing platforms. And while Vertica Systems, founded in 2005, was later acquired by Hewlett-Packard in 2011 and then by Micro Focus in 2017 — as part of the Micro Focus-Hewlett Packard Enterprise Co. merger — Vertica has remained an independent brand.
Vertica’s success seems to stem from its goal of being a single core platform that can address all analytical needs. Its columnar storage platform differs from standard relational database management systems in the way it stores data, which allows for faster-than-usual query performance. As an SQL analytics database, it provides high availability with exabyte scalability on commodity hardware. AT&T, Cerner, Intuit and Uber are a few corporations currently using Vertica to generate more timely data insights.
“We’re an analytical database platform, and we’re constantly just working on that one source code base to make sure we don’t provide a bunch of different technologies and databases and different types of technologies need to stitch together,” Healey explained. “This platform just has unbelievable universal capabilities, from everything from running analytics at scale, to in-database machine learning with the different approach, to all different types of deployment models that are supported.”
To this end, Vertica allows users to scale big data processes without adding dreaded complexities, thanks to its Eon Mode. Available on Amazon Web Services and on-premises via Pure Storage FlashBlade technology, Eon Mode simplifies database operations and addresses variable workloads by separating compute from storage and combining Amazon S3 object storage with variable compute capacity based on workload demands.
With confident self-awareness and over a decade of staying power, Vertica has proven critical to its parent company, as Micro Focus recently announced a $70-$80 million incremental investment in the big data platform alongside security. With its efforts to break down data silos and integrate with existing public cloud platforms, including Amazon S3 and Azure’s Hadoop Distributed File Systems, Vertica sees demand picking up for multicloud solutions.
“There have been a lot of changes in the industry, and there’s lots of competition. One thing we’ve stayed true to is, we know who we are — an analytical database platform,” Healey said.
Vertica is also pushing development in machine learning and other opportunities to apply data science, as its appeal evolves from being merely fast at running big data queries to providing analytical use cases from which an entire organization can benefit.
We offer you various ways to watch the live coverage of the Virtual Vertica Big Data Conference 2020, including theCUBE’s dedicated website and YouTube. You can also get all the coverage from this year’s events on SiliconANGLE.
The Virtual Vertica Big Data Conference 2020 is a livestream event, with additional interviews to be broadcasted on theCUBE. You can register for free here to access the live coverage. You can also watch it on theCUBE’s dedicated page and YouTube channel.
SiliconANGLE also has podcasts available of archived interview sessions, available on iTunes, Stitcher, and Spotify, which you can enjoy while on the go.
March 31
April 1
(* Disclosure: TheCUBE is a paid media partner for Virtual Vertica Big Data Conference 2020. Neither Micro Focus International PLC nor other sponsors have editorial control over content on theCUBE or SiliconANGLE.)
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