TDAN.com – Archive
September 1999
Articles
Information Systems Plan:
by Michael M. Gorman The Bet-Your-Business Project The Emergence and Potential of Enterprise Information Portals (EIPs)
by Clive Finkelstein Enterprise Information Portals are also called Corporate Portals or Enterprise Portals. They provide ready access to information from the Data Warehouse or Data Marts via the Intranet and Internet. Is Your Organization Too Unique to Use Universal Data Models?
by Len Silverston Some of the material presented in this article was excerpted with permission from The Data Model Resource Book: A Library of Logical Data Models and Data Warehouse Designs published by John Wiley and
Sons and authored by Len Silverston, W. H. Inmon and Ke The Next Level of Information Systems
by Jeff Pennington "If information is really useful, our appetite for it is insatiable." --Thomas H. Davenport, "Saving IT's Soul: Human-Centered Information Management" Harvard Business Review March-April 1994,
p. 30 Repository Directions - Part Two
by Paula Pahos Part one of this two part article covered Repository Directions Beginnings and the Near Past. Comparing Replication Technologies
by T Kim Nguyen There are many database replication tools available on the market today, but not all of them are created equal, and how each of them might fit with your application will vary greatly. Creating A Project Plan
by Joe Launi A solid project plan is a blueprint or a game plan that charts the entire project's course. Performance Measurement:
by Deborah Henderson The Data Warehouse Supports Best Practices The success and growth in every business activity-from manufacturing to customer service-is dependent upon how an organization utilizes its critical data. Ok, So What is this XML Thing?
by David C. Hay You've heard about it. It doesn’t mean "extra medium large" on a shirt. It has something to do with the web. It has something to do with meta data. But what is it? Digging Up Dollars with Data Mining- An Executive's Guide
by Tim Graettinger Traditionally, organizations use data tactically - to manage operations. For a competitive edge, strong organizations use data strategically – to expand the business, to improve profitability,
to reduce costs, and to market more effectively. Data mi
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