September 23, 2008

A few operational BI/BPM/business rules stories

Intersystems is rolling out DeepSee, which is a Cache’-specific BI engine. Since some Intersystems OEMs have been known to pay more money to Business Objects/Crystal Reports than to Intersystems itself, the business motivation is obvious. Technically, Intersystems’ claims include: Read more

September 23, 2008

Oracle spotlights its datatype support

Oracle put out a flurry of press releases today in conjunction with Oracle OpenWorld. One, which was simply positioned as a report on some “mission-critical” customer apps, caught my eye because all four detailed examples involved nonstandard datatypes:

September 23, 2008

Peter Batty on Netezza Spatial

As previously noted, I’m not up to speed on Netezza Spatial. Phil Francisco of Netezza has promised we’ll fix that ASAP. In the mean time, I found a blog by a guy named Peter Batty, who evidently:

Batty offers a lot of detail in two recent posts, intermixed with some gollygeewhiz about Netezza in general. If you’re interested in this stuff, Batty’s blog is well worth checking out. Read more

September 22, 2008

The essence of the Oracle Amazon cloud offering

OK. The press release adds color to what I previously posted about Oracle’s new Amazon cloud offering. Read more

September 22, 2008

Oracle announces an Amazon cloud offering

Per the Amazon Web Service Blog, Oracle announced that Oracle can be run in the Amazon cloud (i.e., on EC2, with EBS for persistent storage). Clustering is probably weak, however — e.g., there’s no RAC support, as per Oracle’s well-written FAQ. Perhaps not coincidentally, the FAQ seems to suggest that the primary use case at this time is for backup, and backup is generally a major point of emphasis on Oracle’s cloud computing page.

Of course, another use case could be development, but that depends in part on pricing. Of course, whether Oracle’s offering seems attractively priced compared with, for example, a similar one from EnterpriseDB and Elastra depends a lot on whether you’ve already negotiated an unlimited-use license for Oracle.

James Kobielus, who presumably was pre-briefed, has more to say.

September 22, 2008

Database compression is heavily affected by the kind of data

I’ve written often of how different kinds or brands of data warehouse DBMS get very different compression figures. But I haven’t focused enough on how much compression figures can vary among different kinds of data. This was really brought home to me when Vertica told me that web analytics/clickstream data can often be compressed 60X in Vertica, while at the other extreme — some kind of floating point data, whose details I forget for now — they could only do 2.5X. Edit: Vertica has now posted much more accurate versions of those numbers. Infobright’s 30X compression reference at TradeDoubler seems to be for a clickstream-type app. Greenplum’s customer getting 7.5X — high for a row-based system — is managing clickstream data and related stuff. Bottom line:

When evaluating compression ratios — especially large ones — it is wise to inquire about the nature of the data.

September 22, 2008

Web analytics — clickstream and network event data

It should surprise nobody that web analytics – and specifically clickstream data — is one of the biggest areas for high-end data warehousing. For example:

Read more

September 22, 2008

More Oracle announcement speculation

Like many other folks, Chris Mellor took a go at speculating about Oracle’s announcements this week. Some of his points are sloppy — e.g., he thinks compression necessarily requires hardware assistance — but he did make one interesting observation: Tea leaves suggest HP has a prominent role in something Oracle is announcing. But then, if you’ve been reading along, you already suspected that.

September 19, 2008

How intrinsically numerate are you?

The NY Times reports on research that shows a correlation between mathematical ability and a form of mental reflexes. A Johns Hopkins newsletter article on the same research is here.

Where it gets fun is that the NYT included a link to a version of the test. Blue and yellow dots of diverse sizes flash on the screen, and you have 0.2 seconds to determine which color predominates (in number, not total area). I got 14 correct in 15 trials. Read more

September 19, 2008

When BI, CEP, BAM, and Gartner meet together

Doug Henschen has two good articles based on Gartner’s Event Processing conference, on the theme of BI/event processing integration — an overview, and a detailed interview with Roy Schulte. And as I note elsewhere, Seth Grimes has a good article based on the conference too.

I have my own thoughts on these subjects, but I’m not ready to post them at the moment. In the mean time, I recommend the articles linked above.

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