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Technology Stocks : IFMX - Investment Discussion -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Charles Hughes who wrote (10218)4/7/1998 8:17:00 PM
From: Lou  Respond to of 14631
 
Article by Mike Ricuiuti/IFMX Back in the Game/From a reposter

[An aside:Where is Jim B. these days?/Lou]

news.com
Informix back in the game
By Mike Ricciuti
Staff Writer, CNET NEWS.COM
April 7, 1998, 12:25 p.m. PT

After surviving last year's constant financial and
management turmoil, Informix Software (IFMX) is
out to prove that it's back in the technology hunt
with a new version of its database and an
aggressive plan to lure customers from rival
software companies.

The company is this week shipping new versions of
its Dynamic Server database and its Advanced
Decision Support Option, two key pieces of its
software lineup. A highlight of the announcement is
new features added to Dynamic Server that make it
much easier for potential customers to switch from
competitors' database software to Informix, said
Stephen Lambright, senior manager for server
product marketing at Informix.

More important, the products are the first major
releases from the company since a series of
setbacks last year, ranging from financial turmoil,
management shakeups, and lawsuits to a Securities
and Exchange Commission investigation.

Executives portray the product releases as key to
the company's bid to prove that it can still deliver
top-notch technology and survive in a more
competitive database market.

So far, the strategy seems to be working. Analysts
believe that the company has resolved many of its
business problems and is back on track. In a report
issued last month, Melissa Eisenstat, an analyst with
CIBC Oppenheimer upgraded Informix's stock to
a "buy" recommendation and said that "the most
acute problems facing the company in 1997 have
been resolved, and the business has stabilized."

Much of the credit for the turnaround goes to new
CEO Robert Finocchio, according to analysts, who
claim that the former 3Com president has made
great strides in revamping the company's sales
organization and in luring new customers.

"Finocchio has impressed a lot of people. The next
quarter will be the sign if there is a true turnaround
trend," said Mitch Kramer, an analyst with the
Patricia Seybold Group. "But he's done a
wonderful job. He inherited a situation that couldn't
get worse."

In the past few months, Informix has simplified its
product lineup and has focused on new products
that fill specific market niches. The new releases are
intended to further that goal and to move Informix
further up the food chain to supply software for
"mission-critical" applications.

While sales in the database industry as a whole
have slowed, demand is still high at the top end of
the market for supplying database software for
large online transaction processing and data
warehousing applications, some market watchers
believe.

Informix sees its best chance for strong sales at the
high end of the market, away from competitors
including Microsoft, at the low-end of the database
market, and Oracle, which virtually owns the
market for database software used in mid-sized
workgroup applications.

"We're focused on mission-critical applications,"
Lambright said. "We listened to customers in the
OLTP area and enhanced the core database."

The new release of Dynamic Server, version 7.3,
includes new internal technology to deliver better
performance, for both OLTP and data warehouse
applications, Lambright said. The database is
expected to deliver an average of a 20 percent
speed boost, he claims. Informix tightened internal
code and streamlined the database engine to
squeeze out additional performance.

The new migration tools make it easier for
companies to switch from competitors' databases
to Informix. "We've heard from resellers that the
barrier to moving to Informix is the cost of
switching," Lambright said. "We have added syntax
extensions to support other makers' SQL
extensions. Not all extensions, but many things that
are outside of standard SQL," he said.

Dynamic Server 7.3 also includes better query
handling, Lambright said. A new feature called
in-memory resident tables caches frequently
accessed tables in memory for better response.
And Informix also added a feature called smart
directives, which uses an intelligent optimizer to find
information stored in the database more quickly.

The company also fine-tuned its management
console, the Enterprise Command Center, to make
it easier to use.

The Advanced Decision Support Option is an
add-on to Dynamic Server that lets users build
decision support applications ranging from small
data marts to large data warehouses, according to
the company.

Kramer said the option is a key piece of technology
that could give Informix an edge over competitors.
"It looks wonderful. All this technology does is
make big databases appear to be small, so you can
access them faster. That's a very interesting
approach to things," he said.

Both products are shipping on both Unix and
Windows NT, Lambright said.