SnapLogic

SnapLogic
Private
Industry Software
Founded 2006
Founder Gaurav Dhillon
Headquarters San Mateo, California
Area served
Global
Products Elastic integration platform
Services Online software
Website www.snaplogic.com

SnapLogic is a commercial software company that provides Integration Platform as a Service (iPaaS) tools for connecting Cloud data sources, SaaS applications and on-premises business software applications. Headquartered in San Mateo, CA SnapLogic was founded in 2006. SnapLogic is headed by Ex-CEO and Co-Founder of Informatica, Gaurav Dhillon and is venture backed by Andreessen Horowitz, Ignition Partners, Floodgate Fund, Brian McClendon, and Naval Ravikant. The company has raised $60 million to date.[1]

On December 10, 2015, SnapLogic announced it's $37.5 million funding round led by Microsoft and Silver Lake Waterman along with existing investors Andreessen Horowitz, Ignition Partners and Triangle Peak Partners. This made the total investment raised at $96.3 million for SnapLogic at the time of this announcement.[2]

Products

SnapLogic's Elastic Integration Platform consists of an Integration Cloud, prebuilt connectors called Snaps and a Snaplex for data processing in the cloud or behind the firewall. The company's products have been referred to as targeting the Internet of Things marketplace for connecting data, applications and devices.[3]

The Integration Cloud approaches big data integration through the following tools: How it works

The Snaplex, is a self-upgrading, elastic execution grid that streams data between applications, databases, files, social and big data sources. The Snaplex can run in the cloud, behind the firewall and on Hadoop.[4]

Snaps are modular collections of integration components built for a specific application or data source and are available for analytics and big data sources, identity management, social media, online storage, ERP, databases and technologies such as XML, JSON, Oauth, SOAP and REST. Snaps. Snap Patterns was introduced in March 2014 to help with connecting cloud services like Amazon Redshift, Salesforce.com, Workday and ServiceNow, both with each other and with on-premises applications, databases and files.[5] The company's Winter 2015 release focused on adding tighter security and added support for Hadoop and big data integration to its product line.[6]

Awards

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, January 31, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.