Oracle announces Oracle Database 11g Release 2

Here is the product release site for 11g http://www.oracledatabase11g.com/ As per Oracle communication it continues to be the undisputed leader in big data batabase category.

Some other product features/ claims-

The Oracle Database Machine and Oracle Exadata Storage Server use intelligent storage software to process queries in the storage layer and get answers at least 10 times faster than before.

Oracle Database 11g Release 2 drives down hardware costs by enabling consolidation in a shared computing environment—and reaping the price and performance advantages of commodity hardware. The edition based redefinition feature lets you upgrade applications while users remain connected to their business applications.

oracle

And interestingly

It includes numerous automations and advisors that help double database administrators’ productivity over previous releases.

Claims of 10X, and 100% productivity always enhance the statistical thinking in my head. Did the new software really do so much improvement or was the earlier release just plain daffy. Good software can rarely go up 10X faster and 100% more productivity in a single release.

However, Oracle continues to be number 1 as of now-

Two analyst firms recently published their market share numbers for 2008, both finding Oracle continues to lead the industry, topping Gartner’s 2008 Worldwide RDBMS Market Share Report with 48.9 percent share, and leading IDC’s 2008 Worldwide Data Warehouse Platform Software 2008 Vendor Shares report with 40 percent share.

Interview Stephen Baker Author The Numerati

Here is an interview with Stephen Baker, the author of the famous and remarkable book The Numerati. Stephen is the senior editor at Businessweek and his remarkable book made the world sit up and pay attention because for the first time, anyone wrote of the increasingly quant driven lives we lead thanks to the internet and the analytical brains that power the stimulus, design and targeting of it. Increasing amounts of data is collected about consumers than at any previous point of time in human history and the number crunchers or the quant jocks are the ones who increasingly help with decision making and decision management. Steve calls these people “The Numerati” or the new math people who help shape our lives.

There will always be lawyers and financiers who make loads of money. But they will have quantitative experts on their teams- Stephen L Baker

Ajay- Describe your career journey from high school to a technology writer to author of The Numerati.

Steve- I was always interested in history and in literature, and in college I fell in love with Spanish. So after college, I moved to Ecuador, taught English, and wrote fiction. I saw early on that I wasn’t going to be able to make a living with fiction. So I went into journalism. My goal was to become a correspondent in Latin America. Through my 20s, I worked in Vermont, Madrid, Argentina, Venezuela, Washington DC, and El Paso, Texas. And I finally got the job I was looking for, bureau chief for the Mexico bureau of BusinessWeek magazine.

After Mexico, my family and I moved to Pittsburgh. It appeared that the magazine was losing interest in heavy industry in the mid-90s, so I began to write about software and robotics coming out of at Carnegie Mellon University. That was my transition into technology. A year later, BusinessWeek offered me a job covering technology in Europe. I moved with my family to Paris, where we lived for four years. I focused largely on mobile communications. It seemed to me that the combination of mobility and the Internet would fundamentally change communications.

I returned to New York in 2002. I focused on big picture stories. One day in 2005, I proposed a story about the decline of the U.S. technology industry. I argued that we were behind in wireless and in broadband, we were graduating fewer scientists and engineers than other great powers, especially in Asia. One editor pointed out that mathematics was critical for these competitive issues. The editor in chief, Steve Adler, called for a cover story on math, and he assigned it to me. I didn’t know much about math at the time, and I still don’t. But this gave me the chance to dive into the world of data analysis. I wrote a cover story, Math will Rock Your Business, and later got the contract to write the Numerati.
Ajay- How do you think the government can motivate more American students to science careers?

Steve- I think focusing on the science that kids find cool–robotics, space and ocean exploration, would help. Funding basic research would be useful. But I don’t think it’s entirely a governmental issue. Parents, companies, universities, they all have to participate.
Ajay- What are the top  tips you would give to aspiring technology writers and bloggers (like myself)?

Steve-
1) Learn about non tech subjects, such as history, literature, art and psychology
2) Work on writing clearly for non experts. Avoid jargon.
3) Do reporting
4) Do more reporting

Ajay-The Numerati portrays a math elite which breaks the stereotype of the lonely, nerdy geek. How important do you think is that common people be more educated in math so they are more aware of marketing operations and credit offers?

Steve- I think it’s important for common people, as you call them, to understand basic statistics. More and more of our lives are going to be analyzed and communicated to us statistically. Those who do not understand this will not know to ask the right questions, and will be easily fooled. This is also true within companies. CEOs can be fooled by numbers, just like anyone else.
Ajay- Asia delivers a disproportionate number of science graduates. Yet one generation ago American and European heritage scientists made the trip to the moon with very basic computers. As our lives get increasingly shaped by the Numerati, how important are geo-cultural influences in its membership?

Steve- Most of the Numerati I met in the United States were born outside the U.S. The US has long relied on foreign brains, especially for its technology industry. As the Numerati study people’s lives, the quantitative experts will increasingly need to work closely with linguists, anthropologists, and psychologists. And they’ll need to understand different global cultures and languages. In this sense, the international nature of the Numerati is an advantage.
Ajay- Do you think the shift in money and influence from lawyers and financiers to scientists and mathematicians is temporary or is it here to stay?

Steve-I think it’s here to stay. There will always be lawyers and financiers who make loads of money. But they will have quantitative experts on their teams.

Ajay- What influenced your decision to be associated with Predictive Analytics world?

Steve- I had the privilege of interviewing Eric Siegel as I was researching the book. We’ve kept in touch since then. I think he’s very bright and does excellent work.
Ajay- What does Stephen Baker do when not writing books or articles or observing the world go around him?

Steve- I like to ride bicycles, I like to travel. I love Spanish and French and baseball and music

Biography-

Stephen L. Baker is the author of The Numerati and a senior writer at BusinessWeek, covering technology. Previously he was a Paris correspondent. Baker joined BusinessWeek in March, 1987, as manager of the Mexico City bureau, where he was responsible for covering Mexico and Latin America. He was named Pittsburgh bureau manager in 1992. Before BusinessWeek, Baker was a reporter for the El Paso Herald-Post. Prior to that, he was chief economic reporter for The Daily Journal in Caracas, Venezuela. Baker holds a bachelor’s degree from the University of Wisconsin and a master’s from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.

You can read more about the Numerati at http://thenumerati.net/index.cfm?catID=18 Stephen L Baker is the keynote speaker at Predictive Analytics World and you can check the details here http://www.predictiveanalyticsworld.com/register.php if you want to listen to  him at the event.

You can follow Steve on twitter at http://twitter.com/stevebaker and follow his blog here http://www.businessweek.com/the_thread/blogspotting/

Interview Jeff Bass, Bass Institute (Part 2)

During the 1980’s and early 1990’s, the Bass Institute managed to attract a loyal following with it’s SAS language compiler, ultimately bowing to the financial pressures and technological pressures of the move to the Desktop. In the year 2009, as SAS language gains a new compiler in terms of the WPS, AND computing paradigms begin to shift to cloud computing from the desktop- Jeff Bass, founder of Bass Institute and genius tech coder brings a perspective rich in experience.

If we don’t learn from history, we are condemned to repeat it.

Ajay- Describe your career in science. How would you motivate children in class rooms today to be as excited about science as the moon generation was?

J Bass- My graduate training was in economics and statistics.  I have used that training in ways that I would never have anticipated when I was in graduate school 30 years ago.  But it is still exciting for me.  I started out building microeconomic models, then went on to write statistical language compliers and build health policy macroeconomic models.  These days I develop and articulate health policy to help increase patient’s access to cutting edge medicines.  The company I work for now is very science based and even applies scientific thinking, measurement and testing of alternatives in the business side of its operations.

I spend volunteer time as a guest teacher at local middle schools, high schools and community colleges.  I often talk about math and statistics and have found that one way to help motivate students is to give them “fun” example problems.  I often use an example of the 1969 lunar orbital calculations to motivate basic trigonometry and quite a number of students who say they don’t like math end up loving solving parts of that problem.  I think our school curriculums need to come up with problems and examples that the students find interesting.  I’m not sure our existing curricula processes make this an easy thing to do.  All too often we teach techniques without combining that teaching with strong motivating examples that make learning fun.

Ajay-  What are the changes in paradigms that you have seen across the decades? What are the key insights and summaries that you can provide.

J Bass- Our increasing understanding of biology and DNA is a major paradigm shift that is combining molecular biology and protein chemistry with computer science.  Identifying the human DNA sequence was only the beginning.  Imagine that you were handed the bit sequence of a CD-ROM and were told to figure out what parts of it were a text document, what parts were a JPEG photograph and what parts were an MP3 music file – if you did NOT know the coding schemes of such files.  That’s analogous to where we are today with DNA sequences…we know the ATCG sequence, but we are only scratching the surface of understanding the things that the DNA sequence codes for – proteins, cell metabolism, differentiating cell reproduction. Continue reading “Interview Jeff Bass, Bass Institute (Part 2)”

Jump to JMP: Using Data Analysis in a visual manner

Over the past month or so, I have really begun to appreciate the GUI of JMP. It is very clean and intutively designed. And excellent for a SAS Environment .

Best of all you can easily download a 30 day trial and pricing for this software is quite reasonable.

The worst part of JMP- the droll website. In fact on website, I can deduce something of an Ohri’s Law on Websites.

The better the software, the worse off is the website.

Corollary- The worse off the software, the better is the website in terms of glitz.

JMP is definitely worth a trial for 30 days if you

a) Want to learn a new stats software skill fast

2) Unhappy with visual data analysis of current softwares.

Integrating JMP ‘s functionality with a BI reporting tool is a formidable data decisionmaking tool and it works nicely for me in data analysis I do.

http://www.sas.com/apps/demosdownloads/jmptrial8_PROD__sysdep.jsp?packageID=000503&jmpflag=Y

jmp

SPSS /PASW Certification – Free until Sept 15

SPSS is launching their certification series online. You can qualify for a free Level 1certification as a beta tester til September 15.

If you know Level 1 SPSS, this is a very good chance to earn some resume glitter.

Go to
http://www.spss.com/certification/

spss

Note from Jon Peck- SPSS’s top technie

SPSS is starting a certification program for PASW Statistics…

In response to extensive user feedback, SPSS is pleased to introduce its first software certification program: the PASW Statistics (Level I) Exam. Earning your certification in PASW Statistics will give you an edge that will distinguish you from your peers. And, because SPSSInc.’s Predictive Analytics solutions are recognized globally, you can be sure that the PASW Statistics credential will carry the same significance wherever your career takes you.

The program is now in beta test.  The test fee is being waived if you register and complete the Level I exam as a beta participant

enter promo code SPSSBetaL1ED / SPSSBetaL1 and contact Certification@spss.com

Hidden Agenda- Teach the Kids

Win $25K in cold hard cash by creating a better way to teach a high school subject – on Facebook! Get creative. Blow away the competition! The best example of fun and effective “social learning” gets the juicy prize.

Here is the official link and page-

In 2003, a small nonprofit foundation ran the first ever educational video game development contest. With the help of a powerful and exciting advisory board, college students around the country worked throughout the school year to build the best games possible for middle school kids with two key goals – their games had to be FUN. And they had to teach a middle school subject. The prize was $25,000 cash – practically the foundation’s entire operating budget for the year.

The games these students built in 2003 and in the years since then were revolutionary. The winners are available for free at http://www.hagames.com, and more about the contest can be found at http://www.hiddenagenda.com. Several thousand copies of the games have also been distributed on computers donated to underprivileged middle school children in urban areas. And more is being done with them, and the games they’ve inspired, every day.

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Hidden-Agenda/114956308585

ha

As someone who studies besides , socializes and tries to teach American children ( my coursemates are a decade younger than me)- this is one cool cool way of making the world a better place.

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Hidden-Agenda/114956308585

Interview Neil Raden Founder of Hired Brains Inc

Here is an interview with one terrific person who has always inspired my writing ( or atleast my attempts to write) on data and systems. Neil Raden is a giant in the publishing and consulting space for business intelligence ,analytics, and decision management. In a nice interview Neil talks of his passion for his work, his prolific authoring of white papers, his seminal work with James Taylor and how he sees the BI space evolve.

The history of BI pretty much follows the history of computing platforms. First we had time-sharing, then mainframes, then mini’s, then client-server vs. PC, then a number passes at distributed computing, such as CORBA, then SOA and now the cloud.- Neil Raden


Ajay- Describe your career in math and technology and your current activities. How would you explain what you do for a living to a group of high school students who are wondering to take up mathematical and technical subjects or not.

Neil- I didn’t earn a dime at the career I was meant for, consulting, until I was 33 years old. So I would tell college students not to be in such a hurry to corner themselves into a career. It may take a while to figure out what you really want.

Though I went to college to study theatre, within a few weeks I was inspired by a math professor and switched my major. From that point on, it was pads of paper and sharp pencils. I was totally in my own head with math. I never took a statistics course, or even differential equations, because I was consumed by discrete math (graph theory too), topology and logic and later game theory/economics.

When I went looking for a job in 1974, in the midst of a deep recession, I was confronted with the stark reality (in New York ) that I could be a COBOL programmer or an actuary. I chose the latter. Working at AIG in New York in the 70’s was pretty exciting. We broke new ground in commercial property and casualty insurance and reinsurance every week. I was part of a small R&D group under the chief actuary, who reported directed to Maurice Greenberg, the legendary (but now maligned) inventor of AIG, and I loved the work.

I had to go back and teach myself probability and statistics to get through the exams, but ultimately, two kids and one on the way in NYC on one not-so-great salary was a deal-breaker. I left AIG and joined a software company doing modeling and prediction. The rest, as they say, is history. I formed my own consulting company in 1985 and I’m still at it.

To me, consulting isn’t something you do between jobs or a title you get because you implement software for clients. Consulting is a craft, it’s a career and it is rather easy to do but very difficult to learn. I work very hard to teach this to people who work for me. It’s about commitment, hard work and, most of all, ethics and being authentic with your client.

Ajay- Writing books is a lonely yet rewarding work. Could you briefly elucidate on your recent book, Smart (Enough) Systems?

Neil- I have to credit my partner, James Taylor, with the concept for the book. He was working at Fair Isaac (now FICO) at the time and this was exactly what he was doing there. It was a little tangential to my work, but when James approached me, he said he wanted a partner who was proficient in the data integration and analytics aspects of EDM (Enterprise Decision Management).

James made it pretty easy because

1) he is very prolific and 2) he took most of my comments and integrated them without argument.

I’d say I was pretty lucky and it went very well. I don’t know if I’ll ever write another book. I suppose I won’t know until the idea hits me. I’m sure it will be more difficult doing it on my own.

Ajay- What are the various stages that you have seen the BI industry go through. What are the next few years going to bring to us-

What is your wishlist for changes the industry makes for better customer ROI.

Neil- The history of BI pretty much follows the history of computing platforms. First we had time-sharing, then mainframes, then mini’s, then client-server vs. PC, then a number passes at distributed computing, such as CORBA, then SOA and now the cloud. But while the locus of BI storage, computing and presentation has changed, it’s focus changes very slowly.

Historically, there have been two major subject areas in BI: f inance and sales/marketing, All of the other subject areas still rest on periphery.

Complex Event Processing ( CEP ) for example, is making a lot of noise lately , but not much implementation. Visualization is here to stay . When the BI app and the Web a pp are the same, BI will be everywhere, but it will be a sort of pyrrhic victory because it won’t be recognized as such. Now you can take all of this with a grain of salt because I don’t really follow the industry per se, I’m more interested in how my clients can apply the technology to get the results they need.

Ajay- There is a lot of buzz about predictive analytics lately. Do you think it will have a noticeable impact or is it just the latest thing?

Neil- There are only so many people who understand quant itative meth ods and it isn’t going to grow very much. This puts a damper on PA (Predictive Analytics) because no manager is going to act on the recommendations of a black box without an articulate quant who can explain the methodology and the limits of its precision.

That isn’t a bad thing, and those who practice in predictive analytics will prosper.

On the other hand, I believe there will be an expansion of the use of generic PA models that have been vetted in practice. The FICO score is a good example, and the ability to develop and implement these applications (it’s much easier now thanks to PA software and computing environments in general) should allow for a nice market to develop around them. This is especially true with decision automation systems, like logistics, material handling, credit authorization, etc.

Ajay- What were your most interesting projects as an implementer? Most rewarding?

Neil- Most Interesting: I was the Chairman of an Advisory Board at Sandia National Laboratories for a few years.Our goal was to encourage the lab to adopt more modern and effective information management tools for their dual purpose of

1) designing and manufacturing nuclear weapons (frightening isn’t it?) and

2) certification of nuclear waste repositories.

I was able to work with scientists, physicists, engineers, geologists and computer sciences, all from backgrounds very different from those I normally engaged. The problems were monumental.

Most rewarding: We developed a data warehouse to capture the daily sales of products at the most detailed level for a cosmetics company. They never had this information before because the retailers were counters in hundreds of department stores. Thus they were able for the first time to truly understand the “sell through” of their products. Beyond just allowing a better understanding of the flow, they could tailor their promotions and, not much later, implement a continuous replenishment system.

The president of the company came to the launch and explained how we had allowed the company to do things it had never done before which would change it for the better. You don’t get those accolades from the CEO very often.

Ajay- You’ve written forty white papers. That’s a lot. What impact do you think they’ve had?

Neil- I couldn’t tell you. I don’t track downloads, my website doesn’t even require registration. I don’t see them quoted or cited very often, but then, people don’t quote or cite other’s work in this field very often anyway. I can say that I have many repeat customers among the vendors, so they must be deriving some value from them.

Ajay- What are your views on creating a community for the top 100 BI analysts in the world – a bit like a Reuters or a partnership firm. How pleased do you think will BI vendors be by this.

Neil- I was actually involved in an effort like this about a dozen years ago, called BI Alliance . Doug Hackney and I started it, and we had about a dozen BI luminaries in the organization. I’ll try to remember some: Sid Adelman, David Marco, Richard Winter, David Foote, Herb Edelstein.

You could only join if you were an independent or the head of your own firm.

It was a useful marketing tool as we were able to 1) share references and 2) staff projects. But it sort of lost its inertia after a few years.

But a few hundred BI analysts? Are there that many?? LOL I don’t know how the vendors would react, but I sort of doubt this sort of organization would have any kind of clout – too many divergent opinions.

Ajay- Do you think the work you do matters?

Neil- It certainly has an economic impact on my family! LOL I don’t know, I hope it does and proportionate to my income versus the size of the industry, yes, I guess it does. Not necessarily directly though .

A company in Dayton or Macon doesn’t make a decision because I said so, but I think I do influence some analysts and vendor s a nd to the extent I influence them, then I guess I do . I limit my analysis to my clients. If they think this work matters, then it does.

Biography-

Neil Raden, consultant, analyst and author is followed by technology providers, consultants and even other analysts. His knowledge of the analytical applications is the result of thirty years of intensive work. He is the founder of Hired Brains, a research and advisory firm in Santa Barbara, CA, offering research and analysis services to technology providers as well as providing consulting and implementation services. Mr. Raden began his career as a casualty actuary with AIG before moving into software engineering and consulting in the application of analytics in fields as diverse as health care to nuclear waste management to cosmetics marketing. His blog can be found at intelligententerprise.com/experts/raden/. He is the author of dozens articles and white papers and he has has contributed to numerous books and is the co-author of “Smart (Enough) Systems” (Prentice Hall, 2007) with James Taylor. nraden@hiredbrains.com

Alternatively you can just follow Neil Raden at his twitter id neilraden