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Autonomy Corporation

 
Wikipedia: Autonomy Corporation
Autonomy Corporation PLC
Type Public (LSE: AU.)
Founded 1996
Headquarters Joint Head Quarters: San Francisco, USA & Cambridge, UK
Area served Global
Key people Dr Michael Richard Lynch, OBE, Founder and CEO
Sushovan Hussain, CFO
Industry Information Technology
Products Search engine for unstructured Information
Revenue USD503 million (2008)
Operating income USD207.5 million (2008)
Net income USD148.0 million (2008)
Employees 1,248 (2008)
Website www.autonomy.com

Autonomy Corporation PLC (LSE: AU.) is an enterprise software company with joint head quarters in Cambridge, United Kingdom, and San Francisco, USA. The company uses a combination of technologies borne out of research at the University of Cambridge. It develops a variety of enterprise search and knowledge management applications using adaptive pattern recognition techniques centered on Bayesian inference in conjunction with traditional methods. In March 2009, it entered the Enterprise Content Management Space through its acquisition of Interwoven, now Autonomy Interwoven and Autonomy iManage.

It has grown rapidly from a startup in 1996 and is currently listed on the London Stock Exchange. It is a constituent of the FTSE 100 Index[1] and is the UK's largest software company by market cap.


Contents

History

Autonomy was founded in Cambridge, England by Dr Michael Lynch and Richard Gaunt in 1996 as a spin-off from Cambridge Neurodynamics.[2]

Autonomy floated in 1998 on the Easdaq exchange at a share price of approximately 30p. At the height of the "dot com bubble", the peak share price was £30.[3]

In December 2005 Autonomy acquired Verity, Inc., one of its main competitors, for approximately $500m.[4]

In May 2007 after exercising an option to buy a stake of technology start up, Blinkx Inc, and combining it with its consumer division, Autonomy floated Blinkx on a valuation of $250m.[5]

In July 2007 it acquired Zantaz, the leading email archiving and litigation support company, for $375M.[6]

In January 2009, it acquired Interwoven, a niche player in the Enterprise Content Management space for $775m.[7]

Operations

Autonomy is a proponent in what it calls Meaning-Based Computing (MBC). Autonomy's position as a global leader in enterprise search is acknowledged by analysts including Gartner Group. In November 2007, Autonomy Corporation was presented with an award for the best performing software company in Europe by the European Commissioner for IT.[8]

Products

The main technology is called Intelligent Data Operating Layer (IDOL), and is to unstructured information what a Relational Database Management System (RDBMS) is to structured information. IDOL allows search and processing of text, audio, video, and structured information. The processing of such information by IDOL is referred to by Autonomy as Meaning-Based Computing.[9]

At its core, Autonomy's technology can understand any form of unstructured information, whether text, voice, or video, and based on that understanding perform automatic operations on the information.

Customers

Autonomy also has over 400 OEM partners and more than 400 Value-added resellers and integrators, numbering among them are leading companies such as Citrix, EDS, Novell and Symantec. [10]

Offices

Autonomy has major offices in the US, the UK, Canada, France, Japan, Australia, Singapore, Germany and smaller offices throughout Europe and Latin America.

Senior management

The Company's Board includes:

References

External links

Competitors


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