Thursday, August 6, 2009

Integration - Five Confusing Questions About MDM


Five Confusing Questions About MDM
Posted by Loraine Lawson Aug 5, 2009 2:28:38 PM

One of the more maddening things about new technology topics is how difficult it can be to pin down the basic facts, like how it is defined and what's the best approach.

It's a bit like playing Scrabble without establishing a dictionary of record. Nobody knows for sure, but everybody has an opinion – and usually, they don't agree. It's very frustrating. I suggest Gartner amend its hype cycle to include this as a sixth phase – it could be called something like “The Mud Ditch of Confusion.”


Right now, I'm mired knee-deep in the mud with master data management. A few of the issues I'm trying to trudge through:


What is master data and how do you define MDM? Gartner analyst Andrew White recently noted that definitions of MDM and even the key term – master data – differ. If people can't agree on that, it only follows that they'd disagree over what constitutes MDM. As David Loshin, author of Master Data Management, recently told me in an interview:


There are different definitions, which I suspect are crafted by the definers
to suit their own purposes. My understanding centers the common themes around
unifying the semantics of replicated models and descriptions of business
concepts, and the techniques for resolving the identities of entities within
each business subject area.



Does it matter if you do implement MDM in small stages? Loshin recently looked at the hazards of small starts in the third of his BeyeNetwork MDM checklist series - "Maintaining the Enterprise Scope." He warns, “each newly consolidated data source increases the likelihood of losing critical differentiating information associated with other data sources.” But when I raised this point during a recent interview with Evan Levy of Baseline Consultant, he just laughed and said that sounded like a “datawarehousing person,” adding that it's really not an issue, given the capabilities of MDM solutions. And then there's the bigger, related question...


Where do you start with MDM? White penned a humorous, but thorough, look at this problem, concluding, " the place from which every firm starts the journey is different, and infinitely complex." That may be true, but it's not particularly helpful if you're trying to figure out where you should start. Maybe his bigger point is that it doesn't matter?


Where should MDM reside? This is actually an infrastructure and a political question, as I've learned recently. Marty Moseley, the CTO of master data management vendor Initiate Systems, says you shouldn't couple MDM with your data warehouse, though this is what many companies do. And during our talk, Levy added that developers who come from the data warehouse are often the last to "get" MDM, because they bring the limitations of data warehousing with them.


How low can you go, technology-speaking, with MDM? A recent article published by the Integration Consortium explained how you can build an MDM solution on a shoestring budget.The basic premise is that if your data-profiling tool has the right capabilities, you can use it as an MDM solution. I have to wonder, though, since everybody else seems to view data profiling as a “A Necessary but not Sufficient First Step.”


And all of that's without even wading into the whole multidomain MDM issue.


Of course, these discussions may not matter to you. Many people adopted Web services and called it SOA despite the teeth-gritting of analysts, but it didn't matter because they'd found something that worked for them.


But if you're trying to compare solutions or figure out which is the best place to start – then these unresolved issues can be problematic.

I'd love to help, but I'm pretty mired down in the mud here myself. I'll keep working on it, but in the meantime, here's what I can do: I'll keep pointing out the issues and try to present all sides of the discussion. I hope you'll be able to find a path out of the mud that works for you.


--- original artice at : -------
http://www.itbusinessedge.com/cm/blogs/lawson/five-confusing-questions-about-mdm/?cs=34728

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

MySQL Live Webinar News

MySQL invites you to join our very exciting Live Webinar for Asia South/India/Australia/New Zealand. Space is limited, so register now!!


TITLE:
Live Webinar: MySQL Cluster 7.0 - What's New ?

WHEN:
Wed, August 12th 2009, 14.00 Singapore/Malaysia/Philippines
Wed, August 12th 2009, 11:30 India/Sri Lanka
Wed, August 12th 2009, 13:00 Thailand/Vietnam/Western Indonesia
Wed, August 12th 2009, 14:00 Western Australia
Wed, August 12th 2009, 15:30 Northern Territory (Australia)
Wed, August 12th 2009, 16:00 NSW, ACT, Victoria, Tasmania (Australia)


WHO:
* Andrew Morgan, MySQL Product Management
* Matthew Keep, MySQL Product Management
* (Panelist) Kamal Brar, Business Development Manager, WW MySQL Telco Team ? Asia Pacific & Japan
* (Panelist) Alexander Yu, Solution Architect, WW MySQL Telco Team

Register here :
http://www.mysql.com/news-and-events/web-seminars/display-399.html

WHERE:
Simply access the web seminar from the comfort of your own office.

Whether you’re racing to introduce a new service, or trying to manage an avalanche of data in real time, your database has to be scalable, fast and highly available to meet ever-changing market conditions and stringent SLAs.
By attending this webinar, you will learn more about the next generation of MySQL Cluster, and how it enables you to deliver 99.999% database availability, with real time performance and linear scalability, while slashing TCO.
Boasting a range of breakthrough capabilities, MySQL Cluster 7.0 will enable you to stay ahead of your most demanding, mission-critical application requirements. Enhanced scalability delivers higher database performance with fewer nodes to simplify deployment and administration. Expanded platform support and interoperability delivers more choice in both the development and deployment of MySQL Cluster. Simplified cluster monitoring tools reduce DBA administration overhead and operational costs.

If you have a question, please contact:
Kamal Brar
Business Development Manager, WW MySQL Telco Team, Asia Pacific & Japan
Sun Microsystems
Kamal.Brar@Sun.COM


To verify your browser and operating system compatibility with Webex, please visit:
http://support.webex.com/support/system-requirements.html


Look forward to seeing you soon!
Sincerely,


MySQL / Sun Microsystems
www.mysql.com
Copyright © 2009 MySQL | www.mysql.com

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

DATA MANIPULATION

Scenario : M'sia IT environment.

Are Data engineers needed in M'sia.

What would its functions be.

How crucial are they in M'sia IT industry

we'll take below approach in our discussion
WHAT WHO WHEN HOW WHY