| By David Smith | Article Rating: |
|
| October 17, 2012 05:59 PM EDT | Reads: |
1,049 |
In a webinar today previewing Spotfire 5 (scheduled for release this November), TIBCO announced that it will include TERR: The Tibco Enterprise Runtime for R. TERR is a closed-source reimplementation of the R language engine, and not based on the GPL-licensed R project from the R Foundation. Here's the relevant slide from the webinar:
By making the TERR engine TIBCO intellectual property (IP), rather than using the open-source R engine, TIBCO claimed in the webinar to have been able to improve performance. Apparently, while some packages will run at about the same speed, others may run at 10x speed or even faster. This performance comes at the expense of compatibility: not all R functions or CRAN packages will work with the TERR engine, and it's not clear whether or at what rate TERR will follow R's development path.
The TERR engine will be included in the Spotfire Professional Client, and some new statistical interfaces (point-and-click regression and classification modeling dialogs) will make use of the engine. But if you want to use TERR-compatible R code in the Spotfire Web Player (to deploy beyond the local desktop), you'll also need a license for Spotfire Statistics Services.
Coinceidentally, a second enterprise analytics vendor also announced integration with R today. Teradata's Big Data Appliance, which combines high-performance hardware with open-source Hadoop and Teradata Aster software, will include integration between the Hadoop engine and R. From the data sheet:
The SQL-MapReduce framework, created by Teradata Aster, allows developers to write powerful and highly expressive SQL-MapReduce functions in languages such as Java, c#, Python, c++, and R, and push them into the discovery platform for advanced in-database analytics.
Like the similar RHadoop project, Teradata's R integration works with the open-source R engine.
The fact that more enterprise software vendors are integrating with R is generally a good thing for the R community: it validates the power of R within organizations, and adds more options for bringing advanced analytical methods developed in R to production environments. I just hope that the introduction of a prorpietary R language engine doesn't promote the fracturing of the vibrant R community — one of R's greatest strengths — and result in a fork of the R language into incompatible dialects. Read the original blog entry...
Published October 17, 2012 Reads 1,049
Copyright © 2012 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By David Smith
David Smith is Vice President of Marketing and Community at Revolution Analytics. He has a long history with the R and statistics communities. After graduating with a degree in Statistics from the University of Adelaide, South Australia, he spent four years researching statistical methodology at Lancaster University in the United Kingdom, where he also developed a number of packages for the S-PLUS statistical modeling environment. He continued his association with S-PLUS at Insightful (now TIBCO Spotfire) overseeing the product management of S-PLUS and other statistical and data mining products.< David smith is the co-author (with Bill Venables) of the popular tutorial manual, An Introduction to R, and one of the originating developers of the ESS: Emacs Speaks Statistics project. Today, he leads marketing for REvolution R, supports R communities worldwide, and is responsible for the Revolutions blog. Prior to joining Revolution Analytics, he served as vice president of product management at Zynchros, Inc. Follow him on twitter at @RevoDavid
- Cloud People: A Who's Who of Cloud Computing
- Windows Azure IaaS Reaches General Availability
- Portable Experimenter’s Platform, Powered by Raspberry Pi
- Basho Announces Open Source Riak CS and General Availability of Riak CS Enterprise v1.3
- Predixion Software Announces General Availability of the Latest Version of its Predictive Analytics Platform
- Cloud Expo New York: Real-Time Analytics Using an In-Memory Data Grid
- Cloud Expo New York: The Big Challenge of Big Data & Hadoop Integration
- Agile Solutions for Cloud, Big Data, Mobility Services
- MicroStrategy Announces General Availability of MicroStrategy 9.3.1
- Cloud Computing: Cutting Costs, Boosting Profits
- AMAX Launches StorMax(TM) CFS, powered by IBM(R) General Parallel File System(TM) (GPFS(TM))
- Big Data: Visualizing the Strategic Business Imperative
- Cloud People: A Who's Who of Cloud Computing
- Examining the True Cost of Big Data
- Windows Azure IaaS Reaches General Availability
- Portable Experimenter’s Platform, Powered by Raspberry Pi
- SUSE Receives Common Criteria Security Certifications
- Basho Announces Open Source Riak CS and General Availability of Riak CS Enterprise v1.3
- Predixion Software Announces General Availability of the Latest Version of its Predictive Analytics Platform
- Cloud Expo New York: Big Time - Introducing Hadoop on Azure
- Cloud Expo New York: Real-Time Analytics Using an In-Memory Data Grid
- Book Excerpt: jQuery Essentials | Part 1
- Cloud Expo New York: The Big Challenge of Big Data & Hadoop Integration
- Help Desk Solution Empowers Employees
- The Top 250 Players in the Cloud Computing Ecosystem
- Web Services Using ColdFusion and Apache CXF
- Cloud People: A Who's Who of Cloud Computing
- Red Hat Named "Platinum Sponsor" of Virtualization Conference & Expo
- Cloud Expo New York Call for Papers Now Open
- Eclipse "Pollinate" Project to Integrate with Apache Beehive
- An Introduction to Ant
- Cloud Expo 2011 East To Attract 10,000 Delegates and 200 Exhibitors
- Beehive Code Now Available in Apache
- Apache's Tomcat 5.5 is First Release Ever to Use Eclipse JDT Java Compiler
- 4th International Cloud Computing Conference & Expo Starts Today
- "Beehive" Now Officially an Open Source Project: Apache Beehive





















