Cloudera

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Cloudera
Industry Software Development
Headquarters Palo Alto, California
Services Apache Hadoop distribution and support
Employees 400[1]
Website www.cloudera.com

Cloudera Inc. is an American-based software company that provides Apache Hadoop-based software, support and services, and training to business customers.

Cloudera's open-source Apache Hadoop distribution, CDH (Cloudera Distribution Including Apache Hadoop), targets enterprise-class deployments of that technology. Cloudera says that more than 50% of its engineering output is donated upstream to the various Apache-licensed open source projects (Apache Hive, Apache Avro, Apache HBase, and so on) that combine to form the Hadoop platform. Cloudera is also a sponsor of the Apache Software Foundation.[2]

History

Cloudera was covered by a blog in The New York Times in March 2009.[3] Three engineers from Google, Yahoo and Facebook (Christophe Bisciglia, Amr Awadallah and Jeff Hammerbacher, respectively) joined with a former Oracle executive (Mike Olson) in the company. Olson was the CEO of Sleepycat Software, the creator of the open-source embedded database engine Berkeley DB (acquired by Oracle in 2006). Awadallah was from Yahoo, where he ran one of the first business units using Hadoop for data analysis.[4] At Facebook Hammerbacher used Hadoop for building analytic applications involving massive volumes of user data.[5]

Architect Doug Cutting, also chairman of the Apache Software Foundation, authored the open-source Lucene and Nutch search technologies before he wrote the initial Hadoop software in 2004. He designed and managed a Hadoop storage and analysis cluster at Yahoo! before joining Cloudera in 2009. Chief operating officer was Kirk Dunn.[6]

In March 2009, Cloudera announced the availability of Cloudera Distribution Including Apache Hadoop in conjunction with a $5-million investment led by Accel Partners.[7] In 2011, the company raised a further $40 million from Ignition Partners, Accel Partners, Greylock Partners, Meritech Capital Partners, and In-Q-Tel, a venture capital firm with open connections to the CIA.[8]

In June 2013 Tom Reilly became chief executive, although Olson remained as chairman of the board and chief strategist. Reilly was chief executive at ArcSight when it was acquired by Hewlett-Packard in 2010.[9]

The preferred demonym for an employee of Cloudera is "Clouderan."[10] It is headquartered in Palo Alto, California.

Products and services

Cloudera offers software, services and support in three different bundles:

  • Cloudera Enterprise includes CDH and an annual subscription license (per node) to Cloudera Manager and technical support. It comes in three editions: Basic, Flex, and Data Hub.
  • Cloudera Express includes CDH and a version of Cloudera Manager lacking enterprise features such as rolling upgrades and backup/disaster recovery.
  • CDH may be downloaded from Cloudera's website at no charge, but with no technical support nor Cloudera Manager.

CDH contains the main, core elements of Hadoop that provide reliable, scalable distributed data processing of large data sets (chiefly MapReduce and HDFS), as well as other enterprise-oriented components that provide security, high availability, and integration with hardware and other software.[11]

In October 2012, Cloudera announced the Cloudera Impala project, an open-source distributed query engine for Apache Hadoop.[12]

Ecosystem

Technology, software, and services providers for the Cloudera distribution of Apache Hadoop include:

Awards

  • In April 2010, Chief Scientist Jeff Hammerbacher was named a "Best Young Tech Entrepreneur" by Bloomberg BusinessWeek.[13]
  • In June 2012, received Morgan Stanley's "CTO Award for Innovation".[14]
  • In August 2012, CRN named Cloudera among the "The 25 Coolest Emerging Vendors For 2012".[15]

References

  1. http://www.dbms2.com/2013/06/23/hadoop-news-and-rumors-june-23-2013/
  2. "Apache Software Foundation Sponsorship". Retrieved 28 August 2012. 
  3. Vance, Ashlee (16 March 2009). "Bottling the Magic Behind Google and Facebook". The New York Times. Retrieved 20 January 2014. 
  4. "This Former Yahoo-er's Startup Is So Hot, Even the CIA Invested In It". Retrieved 28 August 2012. 
  5. "This Tech Bubble Is Different". Retrieved 28 August 2012. 
  6. [http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/private/person.asp?personId=1032567&privcapId=5648440&previousCapId=5648440&previousTitle=PowerFile,%20Inc. "Bloomberg Business Week, Executive Profile Kirk Dunn"]. Retrieved 30 September 2012. 
  7. Wauters, Robin (16 March 2009). "Cloudera Raises $5 Million Series A Round For Hadoop Commercialization". TechCrunch. Retrieved 22 April 2010. 
  8. "Hadoop-based startup Cloudera raises $40M from Ignition Partners, Accel, Greylock". Retrieved 28 August 2012. 
  9. Timothy Prickett Morgan (20 June 2013). "Cloudera taps new CEO for inevitable IPO push or acquisition: Former CEO becomes chairman and chief strategist". The Register. Retrieved 20 January 2014. 
  10. "Use of the term Clouderan to refer to an employee of Cloudera". Retrieved 12 December 2012. 
  11. Henschen, Doug (6 June 2012). "Cloudera Releases Next-Generation Hadoop Platform". InformationWeek. Retrieved 22 April 2010. 
  12. Brust, Andrew (25 October 2012). "Cloudera’s Impala brings Hadoop to SQL and BI". ZDNet. Retrieved 20 January 2014. 
  13. "Best Young Technology Entrepreneurs 2010". Retrieved 28 August 2012. 
  14. "Cloudera Honored by Morgan Stanley With Prestigious 'CTO Award for Innovation'". Retrieved 28 August 2012. 
  15. "The 25 Coolest Emerging Vendors For 2012". Retrieved 28 August 2012. 

External links

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