Persistence Software

Persistence Software was an American software company that operated from 1991 to 2004. Persistence developed software for Object-relational mapping. The company was founded in 1991 by Derek Henninger, Christopher Keene and Richard Jensen in San Mateo, California, working with Stanford Professors Gio Wiederhold and Arthur M Keller, who was the Chief Technical Advisor. In 1999, Persistence Software went public on NASDAQ under the ticker symbol PRSW. In 2004, Progress Software bought Persistence for $16 million.[1][2]

History

Persistence Software started life as a spinoff from Lighthouse Design. As the original NeXTSTEP computer shipped with a relational database and Objective-C, Lighthouse engineers had created a simple mapping utility called Exploder to store objects in a relational database.

The Persistence team worked with Stanford Professors to extend the object-relational mapping technology by adding the concepts of mapping related objects.[3]

Persistence created a series of products that integrated object-to-relational mapping, caching, and cache synchronization with automated cache management.[4][5] The products were marketed under the names PowerTier, EdgExtend, and DirectAlert.[6]

Sun Microsystems licensed the Persistence technology in 1998 which was later incorporated into the Enterprise JavaBeans standard.[7]

References

  1. "Progress Software buys Persistence". Progress Software. September 2004.
  2. "Progress Software To Buy Persistence". Information Week. September 2004.
  3. Agarwal, Shailesh; Keene, Christopher; Keller, Arthur M. (August 1995). "Architecting Object Applications for High Performance with Relational Databases" (PDF). Stanford University.
  4. Jensen, Richard; Agarwal, Shailesh; Keller, Arthur M. (May 1993). "Reflections on Object-Relational Applications" (PDF). SIGMOD.
  5. Turner, Paul; Keller, Arthur M. (October 1995). "Reflections on Object-Relational Applications" (PDF). OOPSLA Workshop on Object and Relational Databases.
  6. "Persistence Software Company Overview". Bloomberg BusinessWeek. August 2004.
  7. "Persistence Software and Sun Microsystems Sign Technology Licensing Agreement". Business Wire. August 1995.
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