Yellowfin says Java the smart option for Business Intelligence

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  • JTP PR

    Yellowfin says Java the smart option for Business Intelligence

    Global business intelligence vendor Yellowfin is investing in the best
    available Java technologies and people to stay at the forefront of web-
    based BI software development.

    Since 2003, the company has been actively seeking out talented
    programmers and architects to keep its web-enabled suite of products
    at the cutting edge of usability and design.

    “One of our key strategies has been to embrace the best available Java
    technologies and know-how and then let our creative architects and
    developers run with the technology,” says Yellowfin's Chief Operating
    Officer, Justin Hewitt.
    “So far the approach has been really successful in achieving our
    product goals.”

    The Java platform is attractive to both new graduates and seasoned
    developers. It enables people to work with one language set across
    platforms and devices, and to interact with large peer communities.

    CEO Glen Rabie believes the approach has paid off: “We believe in
    investing heavily in building a product that does not require a user
    manual. Equally we are constantly surprised by the solutions and ideas
    our staff develop to make that a reality.”

    Rabie points out that Yellowfin’s BI development involves constant
    innovation around the user interface: "You can develop hideous UI
    experiences with a GUI, but it is harder to get away with it these
    days. I think this is largely due to the influence of easy-to-use
    online interfaces. People are now demanding technology that is similar
    to their web experiences.”

    In sourcing staff, (“our greatest asset”), Rabie says:”We are paying
    for innovation, not coding. If we were to go down the path of
    offshore development, would we get the same level of care for the
    product? I don’t think so. The strength of our approach is in
    investing in talented people and then allowing them to work together
    to come up with robust and creative solutions."

    Over 60 per cent of Yellowfin's developers in the Melbourne office
    were hired straight out of university.

    "Our people are passionate about software and technology," Rabie says.
    He adds that some staff work independently on open source projects in
    their own time.

    “These are attitudes that we encourage and foster. We want people who
    are innovative, who can collaborate and come up with ideas to deal
    with problems not yet solved. But meeting the skills requirement is
    only one step. We also select those who can work in an environment
    where people are excited about solving tough problems and doing
    interesting work.”

    Yellowfin's products have been built using Java technologies like
    J2SE, Spring, and Ajax. They have also absorbed several leading Java
    BI code sets like BIRT, Jasper and JFreeChart when extensions to the
    product were required.

    Hewitt says: “What has our guys excited right now is using Java to
    develop solutions in WKT [a text markup language for representing
    vector geometry objects on a map] and WKB [database binary
    equivalent]. Java’s support for general geometric objects provides a
    perfect base for database geometry types, which once parsed and
    transformed into plane coordinates can be easily graphically
    represented. These representations can then be zoomed in and moved
    around on. In fact, Java’s capabilities were key to some of the new
    GIS features built into Yellowfin Release 4.0.”

    With some 300 customers worldwide, Yellowfin has experienced 300 per
    cent growth over the past two years. In August 2008, the new flagship
    product Yellowfin 4.0 was released to an eager market. The developers
    who worked on the 4.0 feature list were challenged to build on 3.3
    with integrated GIS, Google maps, Ajax View Builder and a raft of
    demanding requirements that customers had asked for beyond the
    traditional tables and graphs of legacy BI products.



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