![]() | It is rare with all the background reading and research that I have to do that I read a contemporary book and say "Yes, this guy gets it" - notice that I say contemporary. There are plenty of good books about the day-to-day business intelligence problems that I see which were written over 20 years ago (The Mythical Man Month by Frederick P Brooks [1975] and Peopleware: Productive Projects & Teams by Tom DeMarco and Timothy Lister [1987] to name but two). So it was with immense pleasure that I read the opening chapters of Netezza Underground: The Unauthorized Tales of Derring-do and Adventures in Resilient Data Warehousing Solutions by David Birmingham [2008]. This book describes, in a hugely readable way, many of the same concepts and ideas that I have been espousing for the last 15 years about how to deliver a successsful data warehouse solution. |
David describes the building of data warehouses as the need to think of terabytes, not transactional systems and a discussion of very-large-scale data systems. He says that the rules are different here and yet oddly the same:
- Everything is requirements driven
- Simplify and clarify
- Use correctly powered and scalable systems
- Governance
- Data management
- Strong architectural approach
- Building the environment with the expectation of change
- Testability
- Go Parallel
- Never do bulk inside a traditional RDBMS

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