Starlight Analytics tackles challenge of massive amounts of data

There’s been a lot of buzz lately about new ways for consumers to analyze unstructured data, including Wolfram Alpha and Google Squared. But when it comes to serving businesses, several companies are quietly building software to help government and Fortune 50 organizations make sense of massive amounts of data.

A three-year-old startup called Future Point Systems claims to provide the next generation of visual “analytics software.” (Think Google Analytics meets Star Trek.)

Like any other analytics program, it doesn’t make decisions for you, but rather shows you what questions to ask, and then allows you to narrow in on a specific data subset. Unlike Excel and most database programs, Starlight Analytics smoothly handles structured and unstructured data, text files, multimedia, videos, photos, etc. — all in a single program. Also, the power of visual analysis cannot be underestimated. (While I didn’t get to see a live demo, the screenshots are amazing!)

Common commercial uses include legal analytics, market and competitive intelligence, and public sentiment analysis.

Although Future Point is entirely privatized, they were founded in 2006 in partnership with the U.S. Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL). It should be no surprise that the majority of their clients are government and military analysts. They have between 50-100 government customers in the US and foreign space, and about 10-20 companies in the Fortune 500, including some Fortune 50 companies.

All of their installations are one-off custom builds. A commercial install costs up to $50,000, although government agencies receive a significant discount because the product relies on so much PNNL research.

Major competitors within the government world include Palantir Technologies, Tablo, and I2Analyst Notebook. In the business intelligence market, Oracle BI and Autonomy are their main competitors.

Future Point is still a small company, with less than 20 employees. In February, 2008, it raised a $5 million first round from Windspeed Ventures, Fractal Capital, Earl Technology Group, and WTI. Just recently it raised a small second round of from existing investors, but the company isn’t releasing details.

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About the Author, Jeff Widman

Jeff Widman writes irregularly for VentureBeat whenever he stumbles across interesting news...

He tap dances between his home in Mountain View, CA and Bellingham, WA--where he is a full-time student at Western Washington University.

In addition, he works as a Facebook Fan Page marketing consultant--clients include Mint.com, Microsoft BizSpark, and The David Allen Company (Getting Things Done).

Past internships include TechCrunch, Seth Godin, and TechStars.

  • I'm pretty much the last person who should be correcting typos. But, I think it's spelled "Tableau Software."
  • Anonymous
    Do you guys not believe in links? You forgot to provide any in the article. This is the web, you know.

    And yeah, I guess the writer must have heard the word "Tablo" over the phone or something, it's Tableau, of course.

    If this firm focuses on visualization, by the way, then Oracle and Autonomy are not competitors, either, as visualization per se is just a front end to a Business Intelligence or other analytic system.
  • hmmmmm
    Know their competitors...not impressive. Can you imagine using this to make sense of a datacenter or cloud?