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SQL Power Wabit BI tool comes to enterprise users

SQL Power Wabit BI tool comes to enterprise users

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 01 Dec 2009 For: Computing Canada Creator
 

Wabit – no, not Elmer Fudd’s Wabbit – is now available in enterprise edition from SQL Power Group for those frontline workers previously chased away by overly complex business intelligence tools. One analyst said there is a market for user friendly BI tools, but the differentiation won’t last

A Toronto-based business intelligence (BI) software vendor is giving the frontline worker a tool they can actually use with the newly released enterprise edition of Wabit, which follows the March release of the client version.

Chosen for its catchiness, the acronym ‘Wabit’ doesn’t actually stand for anything except the latter ‘bit’ for ‘business intelligence tool,’ said Sam Selim, president of SQL Power Group Inc.

Users are free to “fill in the blanks for ‘wa’ at will, said Selim. But, he admitted the loose connection to Elmer Fudd’s Wabbit wasn’t completely lost on the company.

Selim said the intention all along among vendors was to have BI software become tools for everyday workers, but the sheer complexity of BI tools tends to hinder adoption, said Selim.

Most of the successful tools on the market are multi-module, with each module performing a different function like dashboards, OLAP, ad hoc query, said Selim. “The user would have to learn multiple tools, and these tools are very feature-rich at the expense of ease of use,” he said.

User-friendliness pays the price when features are hidden away so they don’t clutter the limited space on the screen, said Selim.

Wabit Enterprise Edition has a single framework with drag-and-drop functionality for different elements like ad hoc and standard reporting, dashboarding.

Dan Fraser, director of software development with Toronto-based digital advertising vendor Onestop Media Group Inc., is using the client version of Wabit and is considering evaluating the enterprise edition for possible deployment across multiple users.

Currently, Fraser runs reports on datasets for customers, client locations, access controls and the like. If deployed, the enterprise edition, he said, would initially give users the ability to consume reports in a self-service manner. Eventually, users might transition to running queries themselves, said Fraser. “They’ll have a better idea of what questions to ask and a better idea of what’s available,” he said.

Onestop Media, which designed the video screens for the Toronto Transit Commission, has typically developed custom query tools in the company intranet to make data more digestible for users. But Fraser said the enterprise edition of Wabit would take away that custom development time.


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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

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