Database Software Research
Database Software Research
- Join SharePoint MVPs Dan Holme and Randy Williams for a balanced, intelligent, detailed examination of the technologies and issues surrounding BLOB externalization.
- This webcast with Forrester Research principal analyst, Boris Evelson, will answer all your pressing questions about the value of your unstrutucted data and how you can successfully manage it.
- This informative e-book describes proven strategies for lowering the costs associated with database administration, database development, database systems, and data storage. This e-book also discusses the new breakthrough features that make it easier than ever for you to move to DB2.
- By using the Oracle Exadata Database Machine as a data warehouse platform you have a balanced, high performance hardware configuration. This paper focuses on the other two corner stones, data modeling and data loading, providing a set of best practices and examples for deploying a data warehouse on the Oracle Exadata Database Machine.
- In a recent release of an ongoing study by the Solitaire Interglobal Ltd. (SIL) research team, the production behaviors of Oracle and DB2 on the IBM® System p® and similar behaviors of Oracle, SQL Server and DB2 on the IBM® System x® platforms, were analyzed and compared.
- This white paper explains how you can greatly improve your DBMS architecutre for telecom analytics.
- Today’s data integration tools are far too complex and labor intensive. They are inefficient and scale with difficulty—and they’re often prohibitively expensive—based on obsolete, CPU-based pricing models.Try this free software download of expressor Studio to discover how easy ETL can be with the right tools.
- This white paper discusses storage technology trends and why IBM storage systems are the smart choice for Oracle customers. Read to learn more.
- This white paper explains the benefits of working with a services appoarch to data quality and how you can avoid errors within your data.
- This paper summarizes the results of a comparison study in which the TCO of IBM Informix is shown to be at least 31 percent less than the cost of Microsoft SQL Server. This will be of great interest to mid-size businesses who face considerable challenges in their IT environments to reduce costs while gaining the competitive advantage.
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