Data warehousing

Analysis of issues in data warehousing, with extensive coverage of database management systems and data warehouse appliances that are optimized to query large volumes of data. Related subjects include:

August 18, 2010

DB2 workload management

DB2 has added a lot of workload management features in recent releases. So when we talked Tuesday afternoon, Tim Vincent and I didn’t bother going through every one. Even so, we covered some interesting subjects in the area of DB2 workload management, including:  Read more

August 18, 2010

More on temp space, compression, and “random” I/O

My PhD was in a probability-related area of mathematics (game theory), so I tend to squirm when something is described as “random” that clearly is not. That said, a comment by Shilpa Lawande on our recent Flash/temp space discussion suggests the following way of framing a key point:

If everybody else is cool with it too, I can live with that. :)

Meanwhile, I talked again with Tim Vincent of IBM this afternoon. Tim endorsed the temp space/Flash fit, but with a different emphasis, which upon review I find I don’t really understand. The idea is:

My problem with that is: Flash typically has lower write than read IOPS (I/O per second), so being (relatively) write-intensive would, to a first approximation, seem if anything to disfavor a workload for Flash.

On the plus side, I was reminded of something I should have noted when I wrote about DB2 compression before:

Much like Vertica, DB2 operates on compressed data all the way through, including in temp space.

August 16, 2010

Vertica’s innovative architecture for Flash, plus more about temp space than you perhaps wanted to know

Vertica is announcing:

In other words, Vertica has succumbed to the common delusion that it’s a good idea to put out half-baked press releases the week of TDWI conferences. But if we look past that kind of all-too-common nonsense, Vertica is highlighting an interesting technical story, about how the analytic DBMS industry can exploit solid-state memory technology.

*Upgrades to Vertica FlexStore to handle Flash memory, actually released as part of Vertica 4.0

** With Fusion I/O

To set the context, let’s recall a few points I’ve noted in the past:

Taken together, those points tell us:

For optimal price/performance, analytic DBMS should support databases that run part on Flash, part on disk.

While all this is a future for some other analytic DBMS vendors, Vertica is shipping it today.* What’s more, three aspects of Vertica’s architecture make it particularly well-suited for hybrid Flash/disk storage, in each case for a similar reason – you can get most of the performance benefit of all-Flash for a relatively low actual investment in Flash chips:  Read more

August 12, 2010

Teradata’s future product strategy

I think Teradata’s future product strategy is coming into focus. I’ll start by outlining some particular aspects, and then show how I think it all ties together.
Read more

August 11, 2010

Big Data is Watching You!

There’s a boom in large-scale analytics. The subjects of this analysis may be categorized as:

The most varied, interesting, and valuable of those four categories is the first one.

Read more

August 9, 2010

Links and observations

I’m back from a trip to the SF Bay area, with a lot of writing ahead of me. I’ll dive in with some quick comments here, then write at greater length about some of these points when I can. From my trip:  Read more

August 9, 2010

Notes on EMC’s Greenplum subsidiary

I spent considerable time last week with my clients at both Greenplum and EMC (if we ignore the fact that the deal has closed and they’re now the same company). I also had more of  a hardcore engineering discussion than I’ve had with Greenplum for quite a while (I should have been pushier about that earlier). Takeaways included:

July 31, 2010

Teradata, Xkoto Gridscale (RIP), and active-active clustering

Having gotten a number of questions about Teradata’s acquisition of Xkoto, I leaned on Teradata for an update, and eventually connected with Scott Gnau. Takeaways included:

Frankly, I’m disappointed at the struggles of clustering efforts such as Xkoto Gridscale or Continuent’s pre-Tungsten products, but if the DBMS vendors meet the same needs themselves, that’s OK too.

The logic behind active-active database implementations actually seems pretty compelling:  Read more

July 30, 2010

Advice for some non-clients

Edit: Any further anonymous comments to this post will be deleted. Signed comments are permitted as always.

Most of what I get paid for is in some form or other consulting. (The same would be true for many other analysts.) And so I can be a bit stingy with my advice toward non-clients. But my non-clients are a distinguished and powerful group, including in their number Oracle, IBM, Microsoft, and most of the BI vendors. So here’s a bit of advice for them too.

Oracle. On the plus side, you guys have been making progress against your reputation for untruthfulness. Oh, I’ve dinged you for some past slip-ups, but on the whole they’ve been no worse than other vendors.’ But recently you pulled a doozy. The analyst reports section of your website fails to distinguish between unsponsored and sponsored work.* That is a horrible ethical stumble. Fix it fast. Then put processes in place to ensure nothing that dishonest happens again for a good long time.

*Merv Adrian’s “report” listed high on that page is actually a sponsored white paper. That Merv himself screwed up by not labeling it clearly as such in no way exonerates Oracle. Besides, I’m sure Merv won’t soon repeat the error — but for Oracle, this represents a whole pattern of behavior.

Oracle. And while I’m at it, outright dishonesty isn’t your only unnecessary credibility problem. You’re also playing too many games in analyst relations.

HP. Neoview will never succeed. Admit it to yourselves. Go buy something that can.  Read more

July 29, 2010

Microstrategy technology notes

Earlier this week, Microstrategy made Mark LaRow available to talk about technology. The proximate reason was my recent mention of Microstrategy’s mobile BI emphasis, but we also touched on Microstrategy’s approach to in-memory business intelligence and some other subjects. We didn’t go into the depth of a similar conversation I had recently with Qlik Technologies, but I found it quite interesting even so.

Highlights of the in-memory BI discussion included:

Another key subject we discussed was Microstrategy’s view of dashboards. Read more

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