How Much Data Is Missing From Analytics? And Other Analytics Black Holes

Hackers are essentially hiding code within the code itself to gain access to your data

How much data do you store? Let us know .

The average enterprise currently stores 26TB of data on premise, which is five times as much as you would think, according to Gartner. But how much data is actually accessible to IT? It turns out that 80 percent of it remains inaccessible due to errors and errors of process.

The problem, according to Gartner, is that advanced analytics comes with big challenges–data encryption, data discovery, and finding the right people. According to Gartner’s predictions for 2018, the best way to tackle this problem is to test intelligence at scale, which is exactly what Simulax is banking on.

Gartner describes Simulax’s flagship product as “an advanced data search platform for workloads with heavy volume/high complexity requirements, including AI and big data analytics.” The startup has six employees and been working on its Simulax SAS product for five years.

For $3,500, you can enroll on Simulax’s subscription service and be able to use SAS on the desktop, as well as analytics analytics through the cloud. At $3,500 per month, monthly consumption is reasonable and delivers benefits such as subscription testing, security, and data security.

Simulax supports more than 1,000 users, which is impressive, considering that it has been operating for just five years.

In its report, Gartner mentions, “The initial base price for SAS on Simulax is $3,500, which enables you to enable per-end user testing with a new release of the SAS open library. However, price point varies depending on workload; the enterprise-strength Simulax based SAS on SAS for large multi-site deployments is priced at $23,000 per month, per user. SLAs are standard and require minimum nine monthly installations, which can also include unlimited integrations with legacy and new enterprise software products.”

Simulax has already tested its SAS analytics analytics platform in eight industries, including financial services, retail, pharmaceuticals, retail chains, telecommunications, and life sciences.

Our question is, will this initiative and that data be enough to convince potential customers to choose Simulax? We reached out to Simulax’s marketing manager, Ivey Zhang, to find out more.

The video below will give you an inside look into the Simulax SAS platform: