Britton Lee, Inc.


Britton Lee Inc. was a pioneering relational database company. Renamed ShareBase, it was acquired by Teradata in June, 1990.

History

Britton Lee was founded in 1979 by David L. Britton, Geoffrey M. Lee, and a group of hardware engineers along with Robert Epstein, Michael Ubell and Paula Hawthorn from the research team that created Ingres. The company sold database machines, specialized computers designed for database software. it had an installed base of about 300, primarily for midrange systems such as DEC VAX.
Epstein later left Britton Lee to help found Sybase. Britton and Lee left the company in 1987. On May 15, 1989, the company formally changed its name to ShareBase Corporation.
After layoffs and financial losses in 1989, ShareBase was acquired by Teradata in June, 1990. Teradata was, like Britton-Lee, an early database machine vendor.

Products

As of fall, 1989:
The Server/300 came in three models:
  • Model 25: 600 MB of disk storage and one tape drive
  • Model 35: 1200 MB of disk storage and two tape drives
  • Model 60: 3320 MB of disk storage and two tape drives

    Affiliation with Omnibase/SmartStar

An announcement was made in 1984, that Britton-Lee's database machine IDM was being sold together with Signal Technology Inc.'s Omnibase and SmartStar relational database software.
This hardware/software combination of Omnibase/Smartstar/Britton Lee Data Base Machine, was used by NASA, USMC and by financial services for analysis.
SmartStar is Signal Technology Inc 's application development environment
for the VAX, and it supports several databases using native connections:
Although before SQL became standard STI's focus was on IQL, now the query language it supports is SQL.
Components include
  • SmartBuilder
  • SmartDesign
  • SmartStation
  • SmartGL
  • SmartCall and RSQL
  • SmartQuery
  • SmartMove
  • SmartReport
  • SmartPainter
  • ''ISQL''

    Signal Technology Inc

As the above combination moved along, STI and Britton-Lee saw a validation in the form of a review, which confirmed: "there exists no database management system that matches the performance of the IDM with OMNIBASE."