FuseIT partnership with Pervasive significantly increases connectivity offerings
February 18, 2011
To widen our range of integration solutions, FuseIT has partnered with Cumulus Technologies, who provides and supports Pervasive Data Integration Software in Australia and New Zealand.
Pervasive offer the industry's broadest range of solutions for data integration providing the lowest total cost of ownership for ETL, application integration, data migration, B2B data exchange, integration as a service and much more. Design once and deploy on-premises or on the Cloud.
Clients will benefit by FuseIT being a one stop shop for their integration needs. A recent Bloor Research Integration TCO report showed Pervasive Integration to be an outstanding performer when compared with competing products like Microsoft, Oracle, IBM, Informatica, Hand Coding and Open Source. The report shows:
• Pervasive is clearly the most productive environment, you can complete projects in less time than with other products.
• Less internal resourcing required to build first solution. Pervasive Integration only required 5.6 man weeks, followed by Informatica at 7.2 and trailing was Oracle at 11.9.
• In collecting and interpreting the data that relates to project scale and complexity both Pervasive and Oracle rated very highly.
• Pervasive is significantly easier to learn than solutions from the other suppliers.
• Pervasive offers by far the lowest cost for initial acquisition and deployment, even under-cutting the costs of open source options.
• Total cost of ownership—over 3 years - the most economical products come from Pervasive Integration and Microsoft.
• Cost per project – Pervasive Integration, followed by Microsoft, continue to lead in providing a significant overall value advantage.
• Project cost per end point – Pervasive was the lowest project cost per end point.
The Report shows Pervasive appears to be the easiest product to learn and requires the fewest resources for development of a first integration solution. With respect to initial development, Informatica and Microsoft hold the middle ground behind Pervasive and are followed by IBM and Oracle.
Although the open source products fared well against products at the top-end of the price curve (such as IBM and Oracle), they did not compare particularly well against the more cost-effective products—in particular, Pervasive’s integration product bested the open source tools in nearly every category.