enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Extract, transform, load - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extract,_transform,_load

    A properly designed ETL system extracts data from source systems and enforces data type and data validity standards and ensures it conforms structurally to the requirements of the output. Some ETL systems can also deliver data in a presentation-ready format so that application developers can build applications and end users can make decisions.

  3. Data-intensive computing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data-intensive_computing

    Data-parallelism applied computation independently to each data item of a set of data, which allows the degree of parallelism to be scaled with the volume of data. The most important reason for developing data-parallel applications is the potential for scalable performance, and may result in several orders of magnitude performance improvement.

  4. Kimball lifecycle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kimball_lifecycle

    Extract, transform, load (ETL) design and development is the design of some of the heavy procedures in the data warehouse and business intelligence system. Kimball et al. suggests four parts to this process, which are further divided into 34 subsystems: [3] Extracting data; Cleaning and conforming data; Delivering data for presentation ...

  5. Spatial ETL - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spatial_ETL

    The transformation phase of a spatial ETL process allows a variety of functions; some of these are similar to standard ETL, but some are unique to spatial data. [3] Spatial data commonly consists of a geographic element and related attribute data; therefore spatial ETL transformations are often described as being either geometric transformations – transformation of the geographic element ...

  6. Data architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_architecture

    A data architecture aims to set data standards for all its data systems as a vision or a model of the eventual interactions between those data systems. Data integration , for example, should be dependent upon data architecture standards since data integration requires data interactions between two or more data systems.

  7. Common Object Request Broker Architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_Object_Request...

    CORBA Objects are passed by reference, while data (integers, doubles, structs, enums, etc.) are passed by value. The combination of Objects-by-reference and data-by-value provides the means to enforce great data typing while compiling clients and servers, yet preserve the flexibility inherent in the CORBA problem-space.

  8. Enterprise information integration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enterprise_information...

    Enterprise information integration (EII) is the ability to support a unified view of data and information for an entire organization.In a data virtualization application of EII, a process of information integration, using data abstraction to provide a unified interface (known as uniform data access) for viewing all the data within an organization, and a single set of structures and naming ...

  9. Data integration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_integration

    Data integration refers to the process of combining, sharing, or synchronizing data from multiple sources to provide users with a unified view. [1] There are a wide range of possible applications for data integration, from commercial (such as when a business merges multiple databases) to scientific (combining research data from different bioinformatics repositories).