Appistry Media Coverage
Appistry Open Distribution Not Open Source
ZD NET, MARCH 28, 2008
Appistry is doing its best to pick up some of the most successful tactics found in the open source community and use them to become a common name mentioned by developers when they’re speaking with one another.

Appistry Launches Open Distribution Initiative
APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT TRENDS, MARCH 14, 2008
Appistry, a pioneering provider of grid-inspired application servers known as "fabrics," is reaching out to developers with a free version of its flagship product, a new open licensing model and a newly launched developer portal.

Appistry Opens Up for Developers
EWEEK, MARCH 10, 2008
Appistry has launched an extensive new initiative that provides free access to its grid-based application platform and opens the door for more developers to try the company's software.

XTP Platforms: Ready to Make their Mark
GRID TODAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2008
One of the first to latch onto Pezzini's research and market itself as a grid-based application platform, as well as a player in the XTP space, Appistry is particularly pleased with the sunny forecast it is seeing for solutions like its Enterprise Application Fabric (EAF).

INFORMATIONWEEK, FEBRUARY 2, 2008
Appistry supports applications written to most common Java and .Net VMs as well as Spring, a popular open source Java framework. Its EAF software also gives Java and .Net apps an optional clustering API, letting them access the fabric's features directly.

Appistry Customer GeoEye Wins InfoWorld 100
2007 INFOWORLD 100, NOVEMBER 12, 2007
To provide reliability and scalability, GeoEye deployed Appistry EAF to virtualize its applications across more than 50 Linux-based commodity machines. As a result, GeoEye was able to focus on honing its image processing algorithms, while the Appistry platform economically processed each image in the 6-minute window required by the NGA and other customers.

Appistry Rolls Out New Fabric for SOAs
APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT TRENDS, NOVEMBER 9, 2007
EAF works across multiple computers in grid implementations, and the Affinity feature helps find data and run it on the associated machine, which improves overall system performance. It can partition data within an application fabric and cache dynamic data for quicker access.

ZD NET, NOVEMBER 5, 2007
Where does Appistry fit in? When I review the capabilities of the company’s product, Appistry EAF, it quickly becomes clear that it goes beyond the bounds of any one single category. The product exhibits aspects of application virtualization, processing virtualization and even management of virtualized resources.

Exegy, Appistry find ways to speed data processing
ST. LOUIS BUSINESS JOURNAL, OCTOBER 19, 2007
Because of the huge amounts of data being transmitted around the world, application fabric software is becoming increasingly necessary to keep up in the digital world.

Appistry's Fabric-Based Platform Enables Growth
PROCESSOR MAGAZINE, OCTOBER 12, 2007
"The Appistry EAF solution essentially makes five computers look and act like 500 computers," Gullette says. "It's perfect for a small company like us. We are more focused on working with our customers and design of templates and wanted a solution that really didn’t require an IT team. We didn't want to do any maintenance, and we basically didn't want to think about the back end at all. We just wanted it to work. And that is exactly what we got. We gave them our application, and it just runs, and we don’t think about it."













