QuePlix: Legacy Data Search

April 2, 2009

Several years ago I listened to a presentation from Index Engines. The company developed an appliance that sat in a back up stream. The idea was that an authorized user could search for a document processed by the back up system. I thought the idea was an interesting one. A number of eDiscovery firms address the legacy data issue via other methods. Today the organization wanting to query legacy information has a number of options.

QuePlix offers a search system for legacy data. Troy Dreir’s “QueSearch: A Search Engine for your Legacy Data” here alerted me to another vendor in this market space. Mr. Dreir wrote:

QuePlix has just released the second of its platform-agnostic programs which are each designed to retrieve information from legacy applications. The first solution was QueWeb, which not only extracts legacy application metadata, but then builds a user interface on top of it. The allows the company to make a transition toward new applications while still using the data from legacy apps. Because it’s based on existing systems, there’s no need to train staff on how to use it and that allows for a smoother migration. The program’s simplicity and usefulness translates into a huge ROI, Tenberg says. QueWeb was launched in 2001 and is already up to its third version.

I did have some information in my files about this company. The key points I had noted when I got a demo in 2007 included:

  • The company is a Google partner so there’s an integration capability available to its customers
  • Customers can use QuePlix’s cloud option and shift some of the hassles to hosted services such as Amazon’s S3
  • A white paper provides more detail. You can get it here.

More information as I locate it.

Stephen Arnold, April 2, 2009

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