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Publication
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Title
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Date
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Martin Butler Research |
Alchemy – Getting Information from Data. Panopticon mainly operates in the financial services industry where the need for very rapid assimilation of complex information is paramount. The visual representations it provides are numerous and novel and have found good use in many firms. Tree maps, heat maps, heat matrices, bullet graphs and several other visual formats are available. Coupled with very fast database technology from Sybase, Panopticon offers a fairly unique real-time representation of complex data. |
June 2010 |
Advanced Trading |
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May 2010 |
Securities Industry News |
Panopticon and Sybase to Deliver Visual Data Dashboards. The company will provide its customers with a visual dashboard of financial data, using complex event processing, in a partnership with Sybase. The addition of the Panopticon real-time online analytical processing and visual analysis toolset will allow multiple user communities to achieve highly specialized yet bespoke visualization on a consistent view of data and analytics. |
May 2010 |
Wall Street & Technology |
Bishopsgate Financial and Panopticon Team Up To Provide Real-Time Data Analysis. The new partnership will focus on utilizing data originating from real-time streaming sources and complex event processing (CEP) engines, to support monitoring and analysis of real-time market and risk data. UK-based Bishopsgate Financial provides specialist consulting through its four practices: Trade life-cycle management, Front office, Transaction and Corporate banking and Technology. |
May 2010 |
Wall Street & Technology |
Panopticon Releases Data Visualization Tools for Real-Time Message Queues and CEP Data Streams. Panopticon's visual analysis software is used across the trading life cycle, from investment research, pre-trade analytics, trading (including basket trading), post trade, and real-time market risk monitoring. The new products incorporate a number of major improvements over previous versions, including the ability to connect to message buses such as Progress SonicMQ and to Complex Event Processing (CEP) engines including Sybase Aleri. |
April 2010 |
Waters Magazine |
Sybase and Panopticon Partner on Visualization. Database provider Sybase has selected the data visualization platform from Panopticon Software to provide real-time data visualization for its recently acquired Aleri complex event processing (CEP) business, which should be launched this week, DWT has learned. The markets are targeting what we have always targeted-the front office, pre-trade analytics, trade monitoring in quote-driven markets from a manual and algorithmic trading perspective to post-trade analysis. |
April 2010 |
Beye NETWORK |
Panopticon Software Expands Partner Network. Business Intelligence is obviously a major investment for most corporations today, but making those investments really pay off requires more than merely technology and money. It's critical to have the right people with relevant domain experience defining and implementing solutions that will help the client organization achieve its financial goals. Panopticon partners have proven track records at creating and deploying effective systems that help companies become more profitable and make the most of out of their existing IT and BI infrastructures. |
March 2010 |
Dashboard Insight |
What Users Want from their BI Investments: How the Addition of Data Visualization Tools Can Amplify, Improve and Extend BI Investments. People have come to expect highly interactive, well-designed and intuitive visual interfaces in the systems they use in everyday life. Successful BI systems are just as easy to use. They put the information relevant to a decision in a visual context that people can comprehend and interpret quickly. In addition to ease-of-use, the BI systems experts face challenges related to the sheer volume of data available, the frequency of data updates (particularly in operational environments), and the multitude of data sources that can play into a decision-making process. |
March 2010 |
CIO Zone |
Visualization: Enterprises Catch Up With Elevated Expectations. The financial services industry lives on impressive quantities of data that expose, or more often obscure, the opportunity to spot pricing disparities that can be extremely profitable to the first who can identify and act on the information. Panopticon, based in Stockholm and operating globally, also has its base in financial services but works with a variety of other companies in areas such as supply chain management and inventory controls. Data visualization often reveals problems in seconds that might otherwise require hours of searching through spreadsheets. |
January 2010 |
Dashboard Insight |
Market Risk Dashboard incorporating Treemap, Heat Matrix, Barseries, and Scatter Plot data visualizations. This Dashboard is designed for use by financial services users who must monitor and analyze market risk data for the purposes of making buy and sell decisions for equity and debt instruments.
Treemaps make it easy to spot outliers and help you focus on the most serious opportunities and problems. Barseries let you compare the Value at Risk and other factors. The Heat Matrix tab lets you see how the risk profiles for different industries and ratings categories are correlated with each other. The Scatter Plot tab provides an overall view of the correlations between Exposure Limit Use and Value at Risk at four different levels simultaneously. The Dashboard incorporates Filters that allow you to focus on specific Value at Risk ranges, offices, desks, and countries. |
January 2010 |
Dealing With Technology |
New versions of Panopticon EX and the Developer SDK support time windows analysis and streaming Microsoft Excel connectivity. The new releases also offer enhanced analysis tools for financial data sets, ranging from pre-trade, trade to post-trade and risk management. Panopticon has incorporated support for Microsoft's Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF) graphical subsystem into PD, replacing the legacy Microsoft Windows Forms (Winforms). WPF developers can take advantage of Panopticon's streaming in-memory online analytical processing (OLAP) and visual analysis features by embedding this technology into the existing platforms. |
October 2009 |
Wall Street & Technology |
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August 2009 |
Securities Industry News |
To Reduce Delays, Firms Filter-Or Cut Down-The Data Coming In. Complex event processing tools often come with their own dashboards and are used with third-party data visualization software which firms to drill down to specific data points. Such tools are great for creating and executing algorithms if certain conditions are met. However, they don't provide a trader with enough analysis of how the algorithm is performing or how the market is doing on a real-time basis. |
July 2009 |
Buy Side Technology |
Hedge fund uses Panopticon Treemaps for trading operations. JP Morgan veteran James Gislason, has deployed Panopticon's data visualization software to create a more effective trading desk.
Gislason runs Panopticon's Treemap information visualisation software to filter and highlight market, pricing,
and other data relevant to his trading strategies. |
July 2009 |
Data Management |
Do you know where your BI software's data visualization tools come from? Most innovations in visualization technology over the last several years have come from a handful of other visualization specialists, analysts agree. But whether straight to the enterprise or incorporated into existing BI suites via OEM agreements, visualization technology is all designed with one goal: to make it easier for mere humans to intuitively understand vast quantities of data with just a single look. "Visualization should be an extension of how your brain is thinking." |
April 2009 |
ACM Human Factors in Computing Systems |
Sizing the Horizon: The Effects of Chart Size and Layering on the Graphical Perception of Time Series Visualizations. Jeffrey Heer from Stanford University and Nicholas Kong and Maneesh Agrawala from the University of California at Berkeley investigate techniques for visualizing time series data and evaluate their effect in value comparison tasks. They compare line charts with Horizon Graphs — a space-efficient time series visualization technique — across a range of chart sizes, measuring the speed and accuracy of subjects’ estimates of value differences between charts. They identify transition points at which reducing the chart height results in significantly differing drops in estimation accuracy across the compared chart types, and they find optimal positions in the speed-accuracy tradeoff curve at which viewers performed quickly without attendant drops in accuracy.
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January 2009 |
Dashboards by Example |
The Horizon Graph: Should you have a Horizon Graph for your dashboard? When a new information visualization technique is invented, it’s interesting news. The ones that are worthwhile find themselves in our mental toolboxes and eventually on our dashboards. |
June 2008 |
Perceptual Edge |
Time on the Horizon: Information Visualization expert Stephen Few examines Panopticon's new Horizon Graph visualization. He explains the pros and cons of Horizon Graphs and how they can be used most effectively. |
June 2008 |
Waters Magazine |
Analyze This!: Data visualization software is increasingly
used for business intelligence (BI) across the financial services industry to help display
large amounts of information from multiple sources in an easily digestible way. |
April 2008 |
Windows for Financial Services |
JP Morgan Implements .NET Version of Panopticon Enterprise Visualizations: JP Morgan entered production early this year with an electornic trading application equipped with Panopticon's .NET-based treemap tool for instantly analyzing client sales. |
October 2007 |
Financial i |
Putting Data On The Map: JPMorgan uses Panopticon visualizations to discover hidden trends in real-time market information |
Q3 2006 |
Banking Technology |
Get The Picture?:
Financial markets participants do not have the time to read through lengthy reports and access many systems to find the data they are looking for. |
August 2006 |
Inside Market Data |
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July 2006 |
Business Week |
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June 2006 |
Bob's Guide |
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May 2006 |
PC World |
Tame Devilish Data: Given time, you can coax all kinds of information out of a spreadsheet; time is precious though and you might wish for a faster and easier way. |
May 2006 |
The Banker |
Spreadsheet Risk: Spreadsheets are vital tools for traders and banks' back-office staff but their flexibility can weaken governance. |
May 2006 |
Wall Street & Technology |
The Big Picture:
Buy-side firms are beginning to use visualization software to track asset performance |
March 2006 |
STPZone.com |
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March 2006 |
Business Intelligence |
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February 2006 |
Hedge Fund & Investment Technology |
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October 2005 |
Financial i |
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September 2005 |
Financial Times |
Tools of the Trader: Software that creates multi-dimensional pictures delivers data on market activity in a format that is quick and easy to digest. |
August 2005 |
FX&MM |
Panopticon Signs Enterprise-Wide Contract with Reuters: By using Panopticon's technology, Reuters customers are able to get a faster and more complete view of their markets. |
August 2005 |
Euromoney |
Panopticon Closes Deal with Reuters: A pioneering way to visualize large datasets so that the professional trading community can digest information as quickly as possible. |
August 2005 |
FX&MM |
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July 2005 |
Insight |
Heatmaps Come of Age: Bear Stearns adopts Panopticon for visualization. |
May 2005 |
Wall Street & Technology |
Bear Stearns Selects Panopticon: Bear will give its clients and internal users access to the visualization technology. |
May 2005 |
STPZone.com |
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May 2005 |
Dealing With Technology |
Bear Stearns Deploys Front-End Data Tools: Giving clients and internal users access to the latest in visualization technology will get them to act more efficiently and quickly. |
May 2005 |
Waters Magazine |
Strange Tools: Cognititive science and simulated instruments are having an impact on everyone from JP Morgan Chase to wealth managers as new technologies gain credibility and take hold on the trading floor. |
March 2005 |
Dealing With Technology |
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March 2005 |
Investor Services Journal |
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December 2004 |
Insight |
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October 2004 |
Bob's Guide |
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July 26, 2004 |
Hedge Fund & Investment Technology |
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July 2004 |
FX&MM |
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July 2004 |
Euromoney |
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March 2004 |
Wall Street Journal |
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January 2004 |
The Economist |
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June 2003 |