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Geeks in Paradise | Brian Chee » Apatar Data Integration Tool

May 20, 2007 | Comments: (0) | TrackBacks: (719)

Apatar Data Integration Tool

You MUST check this tool out. Simply put, this is not just a one time data migration tool! You can literally have your high power sales folks on SalesForce.com and then your calling center on something like SugarCRM do a join and send an RSS feed to the mobile sales force. This startup with offices outside of Boston and also Belarus is creating a shift in the way we look at data. Tools like this should go a long way towards commoditizing metadata in your company.

Apatar, Inc.
195 Meadow St., FL2
Chicopee, MA 01013
www.apatar.com

This open source java product can be downloaded from their web site (beta version) lives on sourceforge and already has a small but growing community of supporters. Through a cooperative effort, the Apatar developers have worked with their community to release connectors for data sources like: AmazonS3, MySQL, MS-SQL, Postgres, SalesForce.com, SugarCRM, Oracle and many more.

 
Included in the Windows download, this JAVA application also has a scheduler so that data transforms don't have to be a one time solution. You could for instance, run a script once an hour that synchronize two normally incompatible databases based upon filter rules. Literally a poor man's federation.


So in this sample (off their website) data from Salesforce.com and an inhouse Oracle database are joined and then output to both Microsoft's SQL and MySQL at the same time. Simply dropping the data connector on the screen and then double clicking on the icon will bring up a screen prompting you for access credentials to the datasource.

 

So in this example, you can drag data items onto the screen from both sides of the data transformation and do operations like lookups, appends or simply migrate data to the correct fields on the other side. Notice that these data connectors have dots on BOTH sides, since the data transformation isn't just a one way affair.

Just think, I've paid LOTS of money for custom programming to do all of the above and have really felt the pinch of my wallet. Not only that, I've had projects that would have been a terrific help to my customers, but the return on investment was so small that I just couldn't justify it. Now I can give folks readonly access to my company database and let them pull data out and push it into their desktop contact tool. The mind boggles at the possibilities.

Their CEO Renat Khasanshyn and I visited with each other while at the Interop trade show in Las Vegas and soon drew a small crowd of the other Interop Team Members (ITM's) oohing and awwwing over this super cool tool. One of the ITM's figured he could pull data from all his legacy applications in the courts and be able to do test migrations while he works out the bugs. Another gent told a story about how he has a customer on an AS/400 that would so love to migrate some of their DB2 data into SugarCRM. I could smell the burning rubber as the gang brainstormed over how they would use this tool when they got home.

Renat and I had a great conversation, and we had a chance to polish the crystal ball on where he thinks the open source world is moving. Give me a little time and I hope to post an audio file withthe highlights.

/brian chee

Posted by Brian Chee on May 20, 2007 03:55 PM


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I hope Infoworld got compensated for this ad.


Dear Mr. Bob:
Thanks for the comment. This blog entry is simply a first look and I just happened to have some painful memories of paying some really huge sums of money for various data conversion projects over the years. I've also seen a huge number of projects get tabled due to the cost of migrating/converting the data that would have been a great boon to the users.

This product may turn out to be a white elephant, but from first glance and a trial on some data laying around on my laptop, this sure looks like a product worth trying out. Some folks are going to get really excited about it, and some folks are going to use my name in some profound way. I don't care...I've seen WAY too many good products go away and some not so great products do way better than predicted.

Anyway, thanks for you comment...I'd much rather have folks flame me that suffer in silence. I will do my best to follow up this first look with a much more in depth review. Some of the claims sure do sound like smoke and mirrors; but I'm not willing to dump on a company unless they really deserve it. I for one will give this startup a chance, cause we sure do need something like this.

Sincerely,
/brian chee

Posted by: Billy Bob at May 21, 2007 04:58 AM

hi there,

thanks for the post. interesting to know that you really believe in this tool. It would surely help to get a better idea (with more audio/video)why you think so.

I look forward to the next post.

BR,
~A


Yup...I've got about an hour worth of audio to cut down and hopefully use as an audio track for a camtasia (export to flash) demo. When I get back to my lab and more data sources, I fully intend to figure out what is smoke and mirrors and what's real. Our anonymous commenter (Billy Bob) did have a VERY good point, this was a first look and as such didn't have any meat yet...it was NOT a review, so thusly didn't have our normal beating on the product. So, Anjan and Billy Bob, I hear you and will try to comply asap.

/brian chee

Posted by: anjan bacchu at May 21, 2007 09:02 AM

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