Tableau Software officially released Version 6 of its product this week. Tableau approaches business intelligence from the end user’s perspective, focusing primarily on delivering tools that allow people to easily interact with data and visualize it. With this release, Tableau has advanced its in-memory processing capabilities significantly. Fundamentally Tableau 6 shifts from the intelligent caching scheme used in prior versions to a columnar, in-memory data architecture in order to increase...
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Topics:
Data Visualization,
Enterprise Data Strategy,
Tableau,
Analytics,
Business Analytics,
Business Intelligence,
CIO,
In-Memory Computing
Interest in and development of in-memory technologies have increased over the last few years, driven in part by widespread availability of affordable 64-bit hardware and operating systems and the performance advantages in-memory operations provide over disk-based operations. Some software vendors, such as SAP with its High-Performance Analytic Appliance (HANA) project has been advancing with momentum, have even suggested that we can put our entire analytic systems in memory.
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Topics:
Database,
Enterprise Data Strategy,
IT Performance,
Analytics,
Business Analytics,
Business Intelligence,
CIO,
Complex Event Processing,
In-Memory Computing,
Information Management,
Information Technology
Mobile computing isn’t new anymore. The capabilities of smartphones, among other things, enable businesses to run applications across an enterprise and workers to collaborate across business and social networks. In this endeavor Microsoft was early to market with its Windows CE devices that provided e-mail and Web browsing to phones. For the first years it was a low-level battle among Microsoft, RIM Blackberry and Palm as well as Nokia devices that were used mostly in Europe. In the last few...
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Topics:
Microsoft,
Mobile,
Mobile Applications,
Mobile Technology,
IT Performance,
Operational Performance,
Business Performance,
Business Technology,
CIO,
Mobility,
Digital Technology
Actuate held its annual customer day in San Francisco amid the happy chaos of the World Series champion Giants’ ticker-tape celebration, and on that day the company’s ticker symbol changed from ACTU to BIRT (a shift, incidentally, botched by NASDAQ). There was a great deal of focus on its ActuateOne platform (which my colleague reviewed here) and the advancements in using open source software like BIRT with now over ten million downloads, but the aspect I want to highlight is the BIRT...
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Topics:
Microsoft,
Open Source Software,
Analytics,
Business Analytics,
Business Intelligence,
CIO,
Information Management,
Microsoft Excel,
Spreadsheets
In the weeks leading up to and as part of its Information On Demand Conference that my colleague assessed, IBM introduced version 8.5 of InfoSphere Information Server and several related product updates. As my colleague suggested earlier, IBM has an ambitious agenda to provide comprehensive information management capabilities through a combination of product development and acquisitions. The breadth of this portfolio is impressive, and InfoSphere Information Server 8.5 makes significant strides...
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Topics:
Enterprise Data Strategy,
IT Performance,
Business Analytics,
Business Intelligence,
CIO,
Data Integration,
IBM,
Information Management,
Information Technology
The battle for business analytics rages on. IBM, Oracle, SAP and SAS as billion dollar and larger companies each combine analytic computation and processing in the underlying data but Teradata remains a key player. For its part Teradata used its annual Partners conference to tout the next generation of analytics in its product portfolio and brought along customers to testify to their success in using its technology.
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Topics:
Enterprise Data Strategy,
Teradata,
IT Performance,
Business Analytics,
Business Intelligence,
CIO,
Information Management,
Information Technology
This year IBM joined its annual Information on Demand conference with the new IBM Business Analytics Forum. Some 10,000 attendees came to learn about managing information assets using analytics for business, and the value of integrating business intelligence (BI) with information assets across the enterprise. All these topics are relevant, as large organizations have created thousands of silos that house data in many enterprise and personal computing environments. The conference was highlighted...
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Topics:
Enterprise Data Strategy,
IT Performance,
Business Analytics,
Business Intelligence,
CIO,
IBM,
Information Management
On October 25, IBM introduced Cognos 10 at its Information on Demand and Business Analytics Forum in Las Vegas that I attended to review the technology closer from my examination at its recent IBM Business Analytics analyst summit in September. According to Rob Ashe, IBM’s general manager of business analytics, Cognos 10 has been developed for over six years. You’re probably aware that in that period IBM made a variety of acquisitions including Cognos itself. These acquisitions and their impact...
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Topics:
Enterprise Data Strategy,
Performance Management,
Planning,
IT Performance,
Business Analytics,
Business Intelligence,
CIO,
IBM,
Information Management
A few weeks ago I wrote a blog discussing salesforce.com (SFDC) Chatter and the buzz the technology is making in which one of my biggest questions was how a non-SFDC customer could justify purchasing Chatter. Well I finally got to speak with someone who has paid at least partially for Chatter. I say partially because this particular customer already has several hundred licenses with SFDC (which entitle them to use Chatter for free) but has paid for several hundred other users to also have...
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Topics:
Sales,
Social Media,
Social CRM,
Customer Relationship Management,
CIO,
Collaboration,
Operational Intelligence
Mobile computing isn’t new anymore. The capabilities of smartphones, among other things, enable businesses to run applications across an enterprise and workers to collaborate across business and social networks. In this endeavor Microsoft was early to market with its Windows CE devices that provided e-mail and Web browsing to phones. For the first years it was a low-level battle among Microsoft, RIM Blackberry and Palm as well as Nokia devices that were used mostly in Europe. In the last few...
Read More
Topics:
Microsoft,
Mobile,
Mobile Applications,
Mobile Technology,
Operational Performance,
Business Performance,
Business Technology,
CIO,
Information Management,
Mobility,
Digital Technology