Infometry ships macOS NL analytics client
Infometry released INFOFISCUS Conversa for macOS, a natural‑language analytics interface aimed at enterprises already using warehouses and lakehouses like Snowflake, Databricks and BigQuery. (martechseries.com).
Most companies already have the hard part of analytics in place: the data sits in cloud systems like Snowflake, Databricks, or Google BigQuery, but a manager still often needs an analyst to turn a plain-English question into a database query. Infometry’s new move is a native macOS app that tries to remove that extra step for Mac-heavy enterprise teams. (infometry.net) The app is called INFOFISCUS Conversa, and Infometry says the macOS release lets executives, analysts, and business teams ask questions in natural language and get back charts, explanations, and answers from enterprise data. The company announced the macOS launch in March 2026 from Fremont, California. (infometry.net) This is not a new product from scratch. Infometry had already launched INFOFISCUS Conversa in December 2025, and the new announcement is specifically about bringing a native client to Apple’s desktop operating system. (infometry.net) The pitch is simple: instead of opening a business intelligence dashboard and hunting through filters, a user types a question like a chat message and the software generates the Structured Query Language, or database request, behind the scenes. Infometry says customers can choose different large language models, including Snowflake Cortex, OpenAI, Google Gemini, and Anthropic Claude, to interpret the question and generate that query. (infometry.net) That detail matters because INFOFISCUS Conversa is aimed at companies that already store data in modern cloud stacks, not at small teams starting from zero. Infometry names Snowflake, Databricks, and Google BigQuery as target environments, which puts the product in the “last mile” of analytics: getting answers out of a system the company already built. (martechseries.com) Infometry is also selling the software as a governed layer rather than a free-form chatbot. Its product page says the system is configured with semantic layers and database connections through an AI enablement team, which is a way of saying the company maps business terms like “revenue” or “customer” to the right tables before people start asking questions. (infometry.net) The company says the app can reach beyond rows and columns too. INFOFISCUS Conversa is described as searching PDFs and other documents for policy, financial, product, or operational details, so the same interface can pull from structured data and company files. (infometry.net) The macOS angle is narrower than it first sounds, but that is the point. Infometry says the release is meant for enterprises with Mac-based workforces, which usually means leadership, sales, and knowledge-worker teams that want answers on laptops without logging into a heavier analytics setup. (infometry.net) Underneath the announcement is a bigger shift in business software. Data warehouses solved storage, dashboards solved reporting, and tools like this are trying to solve the moment when a nontechnical employee asks a question that was not prebuilt into a chart. (infometry.net) So the news here is less “another artificial intelligence app launched” and more “another vendor is turning analytics into a chat interface that sits on top of existing enterprise data.” Infometry’s bet is that, for Mac users inside large companies, the fastest route to an answer will look less like opening a dashboard and more like sending a message. (infometry.net)