By
William Inmon, Inmon Data Systems, Castle Rock, CO, USA
Derek Strauss, CEO and Founder, Gavroshe
Genia Neushloss, Co-founder, Gavroshe
Description
Data Warehousing has been around for 20 years and has become part of the information technology infrastructure. Data warehousing originally
grew in response to the corporate need for information--not data--and it supplies integrated, granular, and historical data to the corporation.
There are many kinds of data warehouses, in large part due to evolution and different paths of software and hardware vendors. But
DW 2.0, defined by this author in many talks, articles, and his b-eye-network newsletter that reaches 65,000 professionals monthly, is
the well-identified and defined next generation data warehouse.
The book carries that theme and describes the future of data warehousing
that is technologically possible now, at both an architectural level and technology level. The perspective of the book is from the top
down: looking at the overall architecture and then delving into the issues underlying the components. The benefit of this for people
who are building or using a data warehouse can see what lies ahead, and can determine: what new technology to buy, how to plan extensions
to the data warehouse, what can be salvaged from the current system, and how to justify the expense--at the most practical level.
All of this gives the experienced data warehouse professional everything and exactly what is needed in order to implement the new generation
DW 2.0.
Audience:
Professionals in the IT organization, including data architects, DBAs, systems design and development professionals, as well as data warehouse and knowledge management professionals.