Posts Tagged ‘Programming Framework’
SourceLabs’ Byron Sebastian joins Heroku as CEO
SourceLabs’ Byron Sebastian joins Heroku as CEO
Heroku, a startup that helps developers deploy web applications built with the Ruby on Rails programming framework, has a new chief executive — Byron Sebastian, founder and former chief executive of open source company SourceLabs.
Sebastian and co-founder James Lindenbaum describe this as a normal startup move, where a company brings on a more experienced executive to lead the team as it’s ready to grow into a big business. In addition to founding SourceLabs, which was acquired by EMC at the end of last year, Sebastian has served as Vice President and General Manager of BEA’s WebLogic portal and Vice President of Product Management at Crossgain.
Heroku offers a platform to take the headache out of deploying and managing Rails applications. Once you’ve built the app, just launch it on Heroku, which scales your computing capacity, memory, and storage as needed. (It uses Amazon’s cloud infrastructure.) The company says it now hosts more than 35,000 applications, and has been growing at a rate of 50 percent every month since launching. It started charging for its service in April.
Sebastian says one of his big goals as CEO will be making sure Heroku is well-suited for the large companies who are starting to show interest. One of the most promising things about the company, he says, is the fact that it’s using the Internet cloud as not just a different business model, but as a way to transform the way applications are deployed.
“I think that slowly people are beginning to understand what a cloud platform as a service means,” Sebastian says.
Heroku has raised $3.5 million from Redpoint Ventures, and was incubated by Y Combinator.
Engine Yard’s Rails app support gets another $19M
Engine Yard’s Rails app support gets another $19M
Engine Yard, a company that helps developers deploy and manage web applications built with the Ruby on Rails programming framework (which is popular for fast web development), has raised $19 million in a third venture round.
This brings the San Francisco company’s total funding to $37.5 million. As a point of comparison, to about 10 times the money raised by competitor Heroku. Both companies offer services to take the pain out of launching a Rails app after you’ve built it, in Engine Yard’s case hosted private on infrastructure or, more recently, on a service called Engine Yard Cloud that uses Amazon’s Elastic Compute Cloud. Both companies have described the difference as a focus on service (Engine Yard) versus a focus on automation (Heroku), though the Engine Yard Cloud moves further in the direction of automation.
Engine Yard says it has more than 600 customers. In June, it also added support for JRuby, an version of the Ruby programming language that integrates with Java.
The new funding comes from DAG Ventures, Bay Partners, and Presidio Ventures, with participation from previous investors Benchmark Capital, Amazon.com, and New Enterprise Associates.