SAP woos SMB developers with an 'express' edition of Hana
SAP has made no secret of the fact that its bets for the future rest largely on its Hana in-memory computing platform. But broad adoption is a critical part of making those bets pay off.
Aiming to make Hana more accessible to companies of all shapes and sizes, the enterprise software giant on Monday unveiled a downloadable “express” edition that developers can use for free.
The new express edition of SAP Hana can be used free of charge on a laptop or PC to develop, test, and deploy production applications that use up to 32GB of memory; users who need more memory can upgrade for a fee. Either way, the software delivers database, application, and advanced analytics services, allowing developers to build applications that use Hana’s transactional and analytical processing against a single copy of data, whether structured or unstructured.
Originally launched more than five years ago, Hana uses an in-memory computing engine in which data to be processed is held in RAM instead of being read from disks or flash storage. This makes for faster performance. Hana was recently updated with expanded analytics capabilities and tougher security, among other features.
Hana also forms the basis for S/4Hana, the enterprise suite that SAP released in early 2015.
The new express edition of Hana can be downloaded from the SAP developer center and installed on commodity servers, desktops, and laptops using a binary installation package with support for either SUSE Linux Enterprise Server or Red Hat Enterprise Linux. Alternatively, it can be installed on Windows or Mac OS by downloading a virtual machine installation image that is distributed with SUSE Linux Enterprise Server.
Tutorials, videos, and community support are available. The software can also be obtained through the SAP Cloud Appliance Library, which provides deployment options for popular public cloud platforms.
“The new easy-to-consume model via the cloud or PC and free entry point make a very attractive offering from SAP,” said Cindy Jutras, president of research firm Mint Jutras. “Now companies such as small-to-midsize enterprises have access to a data management and app development platform that has traditionally been used by large enterprises.”
Source: InfoWorld Big Data