| By Marketwire . | Article Rating: |
|
| February 21, 2013 01:00 PM EST | Reads: |
344 |
SAN FRANCISCO, CA -- (Marketwire) -- 02/21/13 -- Today Chartio, the company building the best interface to data, announced the ability for Salesforce customers to directly connect their data to Chartio. Salesforce users can now explore data from Salesforce alongside Google Analytics or production databases like MySQL, PostgreSQL and Oracle in the same dashboard or chart. Chartio makes it easy and intuitive to view your Salesforce database, drill-down into data points of interest, and filter data through date ranges.
"We were one of the companies that requested the ability to connect to Salesforce," said Rimas Silkaitis, product manager at CarWoo. "Chartio just makes it so easy and intuitive to dive into our data, that we wanted that capability with Salesforce too."
One of the biggest advantages to using Chartio is the availability of real-time data. Unlike Salesforce itself, which only provides daily, weekly or monthly reports, Chartio lets you report on this data at whatever interval you'd like. Customers connect their databases directly to Chartio, bypassing the need for data warehousing, to receive real-time data to produce the most up-to-date charts. Unlike its competitors, the results you see in your dashboards and charts are always as fresh as the data in your database.
"One of the keys to managing sales, and other operational processes, is to monitor and analyze data in as close to real-time as possible. Being able to match information from external sources, such as Salesforce.com and Google Analytics, with internal data in near real-time will provide key competitive advantage for any organization," said John Myers, senior analyst business intelligence and data warehousing at Enterprise Management Associates, a Boulder, CO based analysis firm. "Often proprietary options only allow you to view single sources, such as Google Analytics, or update at less than near real-time increments, such as Salesforce.com. Chartio's ability to provide this integrated view across multiple external and internal data sources in near real-time via a cloud-based infrastructure provides both operational and cost-based advantages."
Chartio helps the technical and nontechnical alike understand and explore their databases. In addition to Salesforce, Chartio also supports Google Analytics, MySQL, Oracle, PostgreSQL, Amazon Relational Database System, Rackspace Databases and Heroku.
"Chartio is continuing to add more data sources, features and to hire more people in order to create a first-class customer experience," said Dave Fowler, founder of Chartio. "It is exciting to see Chartio grow into the product it is today and work closely with our customers to make it an ideal product for visualizing company data."
We invite you to try Chartio today or visit with us at Strata, Feb 26-28, at booth P4 in the Innovator's Pavillion.
About Chartio
Chartio, a Y Combinator startup based in San Francisco, is building the best interface for data. Founded by Dave Fowler, a Forbes 30 Under 30 technology pioneer in 2011 and 2012, Chartio is an award-winning and great-looking interface that is simple to set up and easy to use. Explore the world's most popular data sources in real-time by working with your database, not a data warehouse. With Chartio, anyone can build beautiful dashboards and visualizations and share them across the organization. Find out how at www.chartio.com
Add to Digg Bookmark with del.icio.us Add to Newsvine
Media Contact
Melissa Smolensky
Email Contact
512-423-3382
Published February 21, 2013 Reads 344
Copyright © 2013 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By Marketwire .
Copyright © 2009 Marketwire. All rights reserved. All the news releases provided by Market Wire are copyrighted. Any forms of copying other than an individual user's personal reference without express written permission is prohibited. Further distribution of these materials is strictly forbidden, including but not limited to, posting, emailing, faxing, archiving in a public database, redistributing via a computer network or in a printed form.
- Cloud People: A Who's Who of Cloud Computing
- BEA Updates WebLogic SOA Portal for Web 2.0 Era
- Cloud Expo NY: Best Practices for Delivering Oracle Database as a Service
- Velocity Technology Solutions Introduces IBM Power Systems Universal Cloud Services at COMMON 2013
- Cloud Business Solutions, Social Media, and Platform Systems of Engagement Market Shares, Strategies, and Forecasts, Worldwide, 2013 to 2019
- Lessons to Learn from the Hibernate Core Implementation
- Component Models in Java | Part 2
- Research and Markets: Global Platform-As-A-Service Market Expected To Post Revenue of US$6.45 Billion in 2016 According To Latest Report
- Java Method Size
- Part 3 | Component Models in Java
- BrightScope Releases Top 25 Technology Companies With the Best 401k Plans
- Tech Trends To Watch In May 2013
- Cloud People: A Who's Who of Cloud Computing
- BEA Updates WebLogic SOA Portal for Web 2.0 Era
- Global Micro Servers Market (2013 - 2018), By Processor Type (Intel, Arm, Amd), Component (Hardware, Software, Operating System), Application (Media Storage, Data Centers, Analytics, Cloud Computing) & Geography (North America, Europe, Apac, Row)
- Cloud Expo NY: Best Practices for Delivering Oracle Database as a Service
- Velocity Technology Solutions Introduces IBM Power Systems Universal Cloud Services at COMMON 2013
- Red Hat Spin-Off Simplifies Orchestration
- Componentizing Applications with Layered Architecture
- Cavalry Rides into Oracle’s Java Suit
- Component Models in Java | Part 1
- Part II: XtremIO, XtremSW and XtremSF EMC flash ssd portfolio redefined
- Cloud Business Solutions, Social Media, and Platform Systems of Engagement Market Shares, Strategies, and Forecasts, Worldwide, 2013 to 2019
- Global Information Security Products And Services Industry
- Java vs C++ "Shootout" Revisited
- Where Are RIA Technologies Headed in 2008?
- Configuring Eclipse for Remote Debugging a WebLogic Java Application
- XA Transactions
- Migrating a JBoss EJB Application to WebLogic
- An Introduction to Abbot
- Cloud People: A Who's Who of Cloud Computing
- 'HTTP Session Replication Failure' Issues
- WebLogic Tutorial: "Integrating Apache Poi in WebLogic Server"
- Eclipse "Pollinate" Project to Integrate with Apache Beehive
- Monitoring and Controlling WebLogic Servers with WLST
- Failover and Recovery of Enterprise Applications - Part 1






















