This collaboration will allow customers to leverage an integrated, powerful data management and all-flash storage infrastructure to power today’s on-demand world, and scale enterprise applications easily and cost efficiently as their business grows.
“In this digital era, enterprise applications – from online shopping to drug discovery – have to rely on high performing technology platforms, with almost instantaneous access to information,” said Dani Golan, founder and CEO, Kaminario. “This partnership will help organizations integrate our predictable all-flash storage solution with MongoDB’s infrastructure for modern applications, to improve business agility and enhance profitability.”
“As the data deluge continues, our customers demand storage solutions that can grow, and support multiple workloads,” said Alan Chhabra, vice president of Partners, MongoDB. “The partnership between MongoDB and Kaminario will enable our customers to take advantage of Kaminario K2’s ability to deliver predictable performance, scalability and cost efficiency while effectively reducing transaction response time.”
Payoneer, a leading B2B cross-border payments company was experiencing rapid growth and needed a storage infrastructure that could scale on-demand, enhance capacity, without disrupting service to its customers. Payoneer chose Kaminario K2 all-flash storage to manage their growth and MongoDB infrastructure.
“As a company processing over 200,000 API calls per day and millions of account applications a year, it’s crucial for us to work with a business who can support this huge capacity and expected future growth,” said Yaron Weiss, vice president, IT Operations and Corporate Security, Payoneer. “We were looking for an all-flash storage platform that could deliver mixed workload performance for business intelligence, transaction processing and NoSQL workloads and chose Kaminario to support our data center strategy. We really value Kaminario’s scalability model where we can continue to grow capacity while ensuring consistent sub-1-millisecond latency without ever doing a forklift upgrade.”