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Home >> Information Architecture >> Data Warehousing

Data warehouse 2.0

Data warehouse 2.0

By:  James Kobielus  On: 29 Jun 2008 For: Network World (US) (DW) Creator

Though they sit at the core of data warehouses everywhere, analytic databases have been treated as mere plumbing rather than as differentiating platform components

Analytic databases are the principal engines driving business intelligence, delivering operational data into reports, dashboards and ad-hoc queries.

Essential as they may be, analytic databases have been largely overlooked in the business intelligence industry's recent consolidation spree. Sitting at the core of data warehouses everywhere, these data stores have been treated as mere plumbing rather than as differentiating platform components.

Instead, most recent business intelligence mergers have been driven by vendors' desire to beef up their financial analytic applications, or add more sophisticated visualization, search and other access-oriented features to their business intelligence platforms.

Though often taken for granted, analytic databases will almost certainly become a key business intelligence solution differentiator over the next several years. With the trend toward commoditization of core business intelligence features, more vendors will distinguish their offerings through the speed, scalability, throughput and mixed-workload support that only a well-tuned analytic database can provide.

Every self-respecting business intelligence vendor will boast that their analytic database can handle more concurrent users, process more complex multidimensional queries, load bulk data more rapidly, execute more compute-intensive transforms, and manage more massive data sets than the competition. Just as important, they'll brag that they can do all this more affordably than the next guy.

In an increasingly commoditized business intelligence market, analytic price-performance is becoming the principal buying criterion. This trend is fueling the industry's growing focus on analytic appliances, which are also called business intelligence appliances or data warehousing appliances.

Indeed, most of the leading business intelligence vendors -- SAP/Business Objects, IBM/Cognos, Oracle, Microsoft and SAS Institute -- provide their own analytic appliances or are developing appliance-based offerings on their own or with partners.

Though these vendors will continue to deliver business intelligence/data warehouse solutions as packaged software offerings, they all see the appeal of appliances as turnkey solutions for many customer requirements. Midmarket customers, in particular, are taking a keen interest in appliances, which provide them with quick-deployment pre-optimized solutions and relieve the burden on their limited technical staffs.

As analytic appliances become central to enterprises' business intelligence strategies, data warehouse appliances will evolve into full-fledged business intelligence platforms in their own right. Appliance vendors such as Teradata, HP, Netezza, Greenplum, DATAllegro, Dataupia and ParAccel will expand their ability to run "in-database analytics" and other applications developed in-house, or by partners and customers.

Appliance vendors will outdo each other in tuning database features -- such as indexing, partitioning, in-memory caching, compression, cubing, tokenization and query-plan optimization -- that are geared for managing myriad analytic workloads. And every appliance vendor will beef up its hardware's scalability through massively parallel processing, clustering, workload management and other ongoing enhancements.


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James Kobielus James Kobielus is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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