Tag Archives: User Groups & Conferences

Oracle ACE Directors Nordic Tour 2012 : Venues and BI Presentations

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Next week I’m honoured to be taking part in the Oracle ACE Directors Nordic Tour, taking in Copenhagen, Stockholm, Oslo and Helsinki over four days. Organized by Heli Helskyaho (Finnish Oracle Users Group) and Sten Vesterli (Danish Oracle Users Group) along with the leaders of the Norwegian and Swedish User Groups, and with the kind support of the OTN and the ACE Director program, we’re running four conference days in four countries covering all of Oracle tech from database through BI to ApEx and Fusion Middleware.

As well as myself, I’m joined by Carl Dudley (University of Wolverhampton), Julian Dontcheff (Accenture Finland), Alex Nuitjen (AMIS), Tanel Poder (Enkitec) and Sten Vesterli (Scott/Tiger). Each country event will have a different agenda selected by the local user group, with my own sessions covering a wide range of topics from ODI through OBIEE to Fusion Middleware and Endeca. Each presenter is an expert in their field, all proceeds go to the local user groups and many of the events have drinks, dinner or other social meet-ups after the main sessions end.

Here’s the dates and locations of each event in the tour, along with the sessions I’ll be delivering (links are to the full agenda for each event):

Copenhagen, Denmark, October 23rd 2012

  • Oracle Endeca Information Discovery for Oracle BI and DW Developers

Stockholm, Sweden, October 24th 2012

  • Integrating Oracle Business Intelligence with Oracle Fusion Middleware: Tips and Techniques
  • High-Speed, In-Memory Big Data Analysis with Oracle Exalytics

Oslo, Norway, October 25th 2012

  • Integrating Oracle Business Intelligence with Oracle Fusion Middleware: Tips and Techniques
  • Oracle Endeca Information Discovery for Oracle Business Intelligence/Data Warehouse Developers

Helsinki, Finland, October 26th 2012

  • Introduction to ODI for Oracle DW developers
  • Oracle Endeca Information Discovery for Oracle Business Intelligence/Data Warehouse Developers

As well as using slides I’ll also be demonstrating OBIEE 11.1.1.6.2 and Exalytics, along with Endeca Information Discovery, ODI, WebCenter, ODI and Oracle R Enterprise. To get everything working in an integrated way I’ve put together the “mother of all demo environments”, running all of these products (apart from EID) in the same Oracle WebLogic Server domain, managed by the same EM instance, running on my 16GB RAM Macbook Pro using an SSD disk – fingers crossed all is working together properly, so I should be able to demo all the integration features working together.

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That’s it for now – next stop, Copenhagen.

BI, Data Warehousing and Data Integration News from Oracle Openworld 2012

This week is Oracle Openworld week in San Francisco, USA, with around 50,000 attendees attending Openworld itself, Java One and fringe events such as Oaktable world. Rittman Mead have had ten sessions during the week, covering topics such as OBIEE, Endeca, data warehousing, Essbase and EPM, Exalyics and Oracle Advanced Analytics, with links to our presentation downloads below (links will be added as presentations are given):

It’s also a good opportunity for us to attend the various product roadmap sessions, talk to the product managers and catch-up with our friends and colleagues in the industry. Jon Mead posted an update earlier in the week on the first few days, but what I’d like to go through in this posting is some of the product news from the week, focusing on OBIEE, Endeca, Data Integrator and the BI Applications.

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Before we get onto those products though, the major non-BI news this week was around Oracle Database 12c, Oracle Exadata X3 Database In-Memory Machine, and Oracle Public Cloud. Many people (including myself) were expecting Oracle to formally announce and launch Database 12c this week, but it’s been a sort-of strange “non-launch” this week with the product described in a fair bit of detail, but not formally launched with the accompanying white papers on oracle.com, detailed articles on their website and so forth. In fact, formally launching a product in that way creates a number of obligations to release the product within a certain timeframe, so by announcing but not launching the product Oracle can get the (expected) word out whilst giving themselves a bit more latitude around when the product actually becomes available. In terms of the database and in particular data warehousing new features, some ones that were called out were:

  • Adaptive query optimization – sounded like explain plans being able to evolve mid-query (which could be interesting when doing some tuning)
  • New partitioning abilities such as operations on multiple partitions, ability to mass-partition an unpartitioned table etc – Jonathan Lewis has a good article on this
  • New online DDL operations such as partition move
  • Asynchronous partitioned global index maintenance
  • Out-of-place refresh and synchronous refresh for MVs
  • In-database MapReduce and Hadoop (interesting…)
  • New In-Database predictive analytics
  • Further embedding of R in the database (see my posting later in the week on R and Oracle R Enterprise)
  • Automatic data compression (may be Exadata only) – database reviews data usage and selects from compression for archive, read or read/write
  • Pluggable databases – a form of database virtualisation where the overall database “root” is called a container database, whilst the virtualised/hosted instances are called “pluggable databases”, aimed primarily at the cloud/multi-tenant/consolidation space

The big news though was around Oracle Exadata X3 Database “In-Memory Machine”. The idea here is that X3 is an update to Oracle’s database “engineered system” line with, this time around, 26TB of RAM on a full-rack machine and the overall product positioned as an “in-memory” database server, with disk being used to supplement the main memory store. Whilst this is certainly impressive and not to be sniffed at, it’s slightly disingenuous to call it an “in-memory” database as only 4TB of the overall 26TB of memory is DRAM, with the rest being flash memory – a bit like RAM on your laptop compared to memory in a USB memory stick. Each server within the overall Exadata rack has one eighth of this total memory, meaning that a typical Exadata server has 1/2 TB of RAM (plus all the flash memory) compared to 1TB of RAM for an Exalytics server (and no flash memory). So we won’t be going looking for a refund on our Exalytics server yet (of which there was no real news about an Exalytics v2) but certainly it’ll be one more product to compete against SAP Hana with, and if someone gave us one for free we’d certainly be all over it. But not quite 26TB of RAM as you’d normally think of it, and you still need Exalytics for hosting TimesTen and Essbase.

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So on to OBIEE, Endeca and Advanced Analytics. Versions 11.1.1.7 and 11.1.1.8 were talked about at the BI Roadmap & Strategy talk, with 11.1.1.7 likely to feature installation within IBM WebSphere as an option, and with new visualisations coming along such as:

  • Interactive Trellis – ability to draw selection boxes around sets of trellis cells to include, exclude data from the view
  • In-line Planning – the example shown was around revenue simulation, where sliders could be used to vary # of sales people, revenue, hours etc with Essbase in the background then varying a projected profit figure displayed on the screen as the “tip” of a tree-like structure
  • Motion chart – augmenting existing time controls and designed to show trends over time
  • Heatmap – a grid of coloured cells showing different shades of base colours (red, green etc) to reveal distribution and hidden patterns
  • Timeline Analysis – represents key events over a particular period and reveals supporting details as required
  • Histogram / Chip Display – a variation on the trellis chart / sparkline chart plotting density, and supporting estimation by showing a visual impression of the distribution of data
  • Treemap – shows patterns in data by displaying hierarchical (tree-structured) data as sets of nested rectangles
  • Updates to the thematic maps and hierarchy wheel visualisations
  • Performance tiles, freeze headers for tables, waterfall and stacked bar charts, precision layers, improved printing, full-featured Excel interaction

BI Mobile was talked about, with the 11.1.1.6.2 BP1 “BI Mobile HD” version being showcased and talk about more specialised, job-specific mobile applications called “BI Mobile Solutions” that take elements of Oracle BI Mobile and embed it in function-specific, pre-built applications (including Windows Mobile and Android) apps. Nothing on dates or how these products would be distributed, but coupled with an announcement in a separate session about making the BI Mobile application available as a static library for embedding in security wrappers provided by the likes of Bitzer Mobile, it seems likely that Oracle are focusing on mobile as a first-class delivery platform for BI and looking to address some of the remaining shortcomings of their more general purpose BI Mobile app.

The other major announcement for OBIEE was around SmartView replacing BI Office as OBIEE’s MS Office client. BI Office has been lacking for a while now whilst SmartView, though technically compatible with OBIEE wasn’t really suitable as a replacement for BI Office. OBIEE 11.1.1.7 looks likely to introduce an updated version of SmartView that will support migration from BI Office, and will work as an Office front-end for both OBIEE and the Hyperion Tools, covering MS Word, MS Excel and MS Powerpoint. Should be interesting to see when it comes out.

Endeca and the BI Apps also go their own mention and, in the case of BI Apps, roadmap presentation. No real new news on either product (we covered the BI Apps product roadmap in a three-part series earlier in the year, available here, here and here) but it was good to hear Florian Schouten talk about where the BI Apps user interface is going post 11g, and to hear the search/discovery and unstructured analytics message getting out to the audience for Endeca. R, and Oracle R Enterprise also got a mention at many sessions, and I’m looking forward to delivering my combined OBIEE / Endeca and Oracle R Enterprise on Exalytics talk at Openworld later today. So positive words and lots around visualisations for Oracle’s BI tools at Openworld.

My other main interest for this year’s Openworld was around data integration, big data and advanced analytics, and in several sessions Oracle’s big data strategy was set out similar to the diagram below.

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Key elements here that may not be apparent to readers immersed in the “big data” story include:

  • Oracle Big Data Appliance (a large, full-rack server running various Oracle “big data” tools and the Cloudera distribution of Hadoop and MapReduce) acts as the collection point for the mass of machine data, social media conversations and other “big data” data flows and uses techniques such as MapReduce to condense this data down into something suitable for loading into Exadata, via Oracle’s Big Data Connectors (and over InfiniBand for high-bandwidth loading)
  • Exadata then acts as the down-stream storage system of record for this condensed information, with Endeca then supporting unstructured/discovery-type analytics, Exalytics (again via InfiniBand) performing traditional dashboard and OLAP-style analytics, and RTD supporting decisioning and predictive modelling.
  • All of these tools fit into the canonical acquire-organise-analyze-decide big data analytics approach

Big Data Connectors are a key part also of Oracle’s Data Integration strategy, with ODI providing the link between Big Data Appliance and Exadata, and in-general moving and orchestrating data across the whole Oracle product stack, in a process Oracle have termed “fast data”.

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The ODI product roadmap and futures session covered the use of ODI with big data and went through some of the release themes for future versions of the product, which look likely to pan out like this:

  • ODI 11.1.1.7 – due around the autumn/ fall of 2012 – will focus on XML handling and parsing (a welcome bit of news)
  • ODI 12c – probably due in 2013 at some point – will be the OWB/ODI conversion release, featuring a “developer jumpstart” that will allow the tool to be switched between pure old-style ODI and the new “mappings”-based ODI/OWB convergence approach

ODI 11.1.1.7 is also likely to be the release that the BI Apps team will use to extend ETL support to this product, a topic again at I covered in my BI Apps roadmap postings earlier in the year. ODI 12c is going to be the most significant release, with the concept of interfaces going away an instead an OWB-style approach being used where mappings can contain multiple steps, objects like variables will appear in the mapping and be configurable using the mapping UI, and many of the concepts used in OWB brought across to ODI. Expect more details once 2013 comes along, and also details on how optional migration from OWB will become available as a feature within the tool.

So that’s in in terms of updates from me, with the time now 10.45am on the Wednesday and my last presentation, on Exalytics and Big Data Analytics, due at 5pm later today. Have a safe journey home if you’re also over in San Francisco, and expect a posting from me in the next few days on using OBIEE, Endeca and Oracle R Enterprise on the Exalytics platform based on today’s talk.

ODTUG Kscope 2012 BI Track’s Interactive Mad-Dash-Boards

Sorry to break in on Mark’s Endeca series this week, but I wanted to give a quick update on some ODTUG Kscope 2012 news.

It’s tradition at Kscope to follow the Monday Night Keynote presentation with a series of track-specific, fun-and-learning events that allow people to network and socialize with folks interested in the same technical content. This year, Kscope is lucky to have Cary Millsap present the Monday Night Keynote titled “Learning About Life Through Business and Software”. I personally attended this presentation at both UKOUG and RMOUG, and I can tell you it is worth the price of admission. As excited as I am about seeing Cary’s presentation again, I’m also excited about the BI Track’s Monday Night event: BI’s Interactive Mad-Dash-Boards. I’m on the BI Content committee this year, and it’s been fun to see content chair Kevin McGinley work out the scheme for the Monday Night event, which is the first time the BI Track will have their own entry for the evening.

At Rittman Mead, we are confident that this maiden voyage will be a success, so we’ve decided to sponsor the event. There will be free snacks and free drinks (adult and otherwise), and all of the Rittman Mead presenters will be attending as well: Mark Rittman, Börkur Steingrímsson, Charles Elliott, Jordan Meyer, and of course myself. Content Chair Kevin McGinley will be MC’ing the event, so attendees will have a chance to meet many of the voices behind the BI content at Kscope.

So if you are joining us at Kscope this year (and you know you should be) and you are interested in the BI content, please join us at BI’s Interactive Mad-Dash-Boards Monday night. And do yourself a favor… catch Cary Millsap’s talk first… you’ll be glad you did.

Presentation Downloads, Links and Photos for the RM BI Forum 2012

Well the two BI Forum 2012 events in Brighton, and in Atlanta, are both now over, and as usual we’re now making the presentations available for download. Thanks again to all of the speakers, and in particular Kevin McGinley who provided the masterclasses, for putting the time in to create these presentations and share their knowledge at the two events. If you missed them when they were posted, here’s the two blog posts recapping Brighton and Atlanta 2012:

All presentations are in PDF format and, unless otherwise stated, are copyright of their respective authors/companies. Congratulations also to Emiel van Bockel and Jordan Meyer, winners of the best presentation awards for Brighton and Atlanta respectively, and to Antony Heljula and John Minkjan, who tied for best speaker in the 10-minute session category in Brighton.

Kevin McGinley Masterclass slides:

These are the presentation slides from the rest of the conference, from both Brighton and Atlanta:

Finally, I put together two Flickr photo sets of the Brighton, and Atlanta, events, which you can access here:

Thanks again to everyone who attended, spoke or helped organize the event. Now to start planning 2013!

UKOUG Conference Call for Papers – Just Two Weeks Left!

Although it’s great fun to travel the world speaking at events such as Oracle Openworld, Collaborate and ODTUG KScope, Rittman Mead in the UK still consider the UK Oracle User Group Conference, held in Birmingham in November or December each year, to be our “home” conference and our main showcase for what we’ve been up to in the last year. Like most of the big annual conferences, the UKOUG event has multiple streams and the one we’re particularly interested in is the Business Intelligence and Data Warehousing stream, covering topics and products such as OBIEE, ODI, Essbase and Oracle OLAP, BI methodologies and the BI Applications.

Jon Mead is on the board of directors for the UKOUG, and both Jon and I have chaired the Business Intelligence & Reporting Tools SIG within the UKOUG in previous years. I’m particularly keen that we get some good, new and in-depth content around Oracle BI, DW and ETL for this year’s event, and I’d imagine papers on the following topics might go down well:

  • OBIEE development methodologies and best/right practices
  • OBIEE metadata modeling techniques, particularly against OLTP sources, OLAP sources and federating disparate data sources
  • Dashboard design best practices, and anything around effective / innovative visualizations
  • Presentations around data mining, Oracle R, big data and Hadoop
  • Tips and techniques around ODI, including migrations from OWB and Informatica
  • Papers around mapping, mobile, scorecards or any of the other OBIEE extensions introduced with 11g
  • Techniques to get the best out of the BI Apps, including handling upgrades, preparing for the Fusion Apps, and combining packaged data models with custom ones

I’ll be putting a paper in on real-world use of the Exalytics In-Memory Machine, based on testing we’ll be doing over the summer along with feedback from customer PoCs. All speakers get a three-day pass to attend all of the other sessions, and if you get accepted you’ll be presenting at Europe’s biggest Oracle conference as well as knowing you’re contributing to a great event. There’s also a number of great social events and awards over the three days of the conference, and the photo below is of Debra Lilley (UKOUG President) and Lisa Dobson (Vice President) giving the awards whilst Vikki Lira (OTN and the ACE Program) stands in the foreground.

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The call for papers website is here, and you’ve got until the 1st of June to get your abstracts in. Hopefully I’ll see some of you attend, and maybe present,