Topics to be presented Adv. Databases and Dataware Houses Topics to be presented by students 1.Indexing DW (Bitmap, MDX, X-Tree, UB-Tree, etc.) ( approx.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
C2-SENSE WP2 Bojan Božić, Gerald Schimak, Refiz Duro C2-SENSE WP2 Meeting Paris
Advertisements

1 Chapter 2: Product Development Process and Organization Introduction Importance of human resources: Most companies have similar technology resources.
ICS (072)Database Systems: A Review1 Database Systems: A Review Dr. Muhammad Shafique.
Rainbow: XML and Relational Database Design, Implementation, Test, and Evaluation Project Members: Tien Vu, Mirek Cymer, John Lee Advisor:
Chapter 6 Database Design
1 Agenda 01/13/05 Announcement Database Development Process (Chapter 2)
IS112 – Chapter 1 Notes Computer Organization and Programming Professor Catherine Dwyer 2003.
1 Course Schedule Spring 2006 Exam 1 February 2006 Project Introduction(5pages)3/24/06 Project Testing 3/24-4/15 Exam 2 4/11/06 Presentation instructions:
©Ian Sommerville 2004Software Engineering, 7th edition. Chapter 5 Slide 1 Review 1.
IS112 – Chapter 1 Notes Computer Organization and Programming Professor Catherine Dwyer Fall 2004.
1 Course Schedule Spring 2007 Exam 1 October 2007 Project Introduction(5pages)Oct – Nov Exam 2 November 2007 Project Testing Nov 26 - Dec4 Last Homework.
Database Administration
Information Systems Development Lecture 2: the idea of the Life Cycle.
1 IS 4420 Database Fundamentals Chapter 2: Database Development Process Leon Chen.
©Ian Sommerville 2000Software Engineering, 6/e, Chapter 91 Formal Specification l Techniques for the unambiguous specification of software.
Chapter 1: The Database Environment and Development Process
8 Systems Analysis and Design in a Changing World, Fifth Edition.
©Ian Sommerville 2004Software Engineering, 7th edition. Chapter 5 Slide 1 Review 1.
6 Chapter 6 Database Design Hachim Haddouti. 6 2 Hachim Haddouti and Rob & Coronel, Ch6 In this chapter, you will learn: That successful database design.
©Ian Sommerville 2004Software Engineering, 7th edition. Chapter 6 Slide 1 Software Requirements 2.
Chapter 10: Architectural Design
©Ian Sommerville 2000 Software Engineering, 6th edition. Chapter 5 Slide 1 Requirements engineering l The process of establishing the services that the.
SDLC and alternative methodologies 1/14/2015 © Abdou Illia MIS Spring 2015.
Software Engineer Report What should contains the report?!
1 Brett Hanes 30 March 2007 Data Warehousing & Business Intelligence 30 March 2007 Brett Hanes.
Chapter 6 System Engineering - Computer-based system - System engineering process - “Business process” engineering - Product engineering (Source: Pressman,
Web-Enabled Decision Support Systems
1 Configuration Management “The Cookbook Approach”
IST 210 Database Design Process IST 210 Todd S. Bacastow January 2005.
Week 4 Lecture Part 3 of 3 Database Design Samuel ConnSamuel Conn, Faculty Suggestions for using the Lecture Slides.
Odyssey A Reuse Environment based on Domain Models Prepared By: Mahmud Gabareen Eliad Cohen.
Dr. Mohamed Osman Hegazi 1 Database Systems Concepts Database Systems Concepts Course Outlines: Introduction to Databases and DBMS. Database System Concepts.
Rev. 0 CONFIDENTIAL Mod.19 02/00 Rev.2 Mobile Terminals S.p.A. Trieste Author: M.Fragiacomo, D.Protti, M.Torelli 31 Project Idea Feasibility.
The objectives of Phase G are to Ensure conformance with the Target Architecture by implementation projects Perform appropriate Architecture Governance.
CSCE 520 Final Exam Study Guide. Next Class Guest Lecture on Hadoop – Dr. John Rose Interesting site: – Big Data Jobs Around The Nation (And What They.
10 Software Architecture CSCU 411 Software Engineering.
1 / 18 CS 425/625 Software Engineering Requirements Engineering Processes Based on Chapter 6 of the textbook [Somm00] Ian Sommerville, Software Engineering,
1 INTEROP WP1: Knowledge Map Michaël Petit (U. of Namur) January 19 th 2004 Updated description of tasks after INTEROP Kickoff Meeting, Bordeaux.
MIS 327 Database Management system 1 MIS 327: DBMS Dr. Monther Tarawneh Dr. Monther Tarawneh Week 2: Basic Concepts.
Intro – Part 2 Introduction to Database Management: Ch 1 & 2.
CS206 System Analysis and Design Note 1 By ChangYu 1 Course Information Lecturer NameCHANG YU Web sitewww.chuhai.edu.hk/changyu/
ICS (072)Database Systems: An Introduction & Review 1 ICS 424 Advanced Database Systems Dr. Muhammad Shafique.
©Ian Sommerville 2004Software Engineering, 7th edition. Chapter 4 Slide 1 Slide 1 Analysis Workflow l The primary activities of the Analysis workflow are.
About Me Hachim Haddouti, born in 1969, married, one son Ph.D. in Computer Science (Database Management Systems) at Technical University of Munich under.
1 CS240: Network Routing Michalis Faloutsos. 2 Scope Routing Basics BGP routing Ad hoc routing Security Issues Group communications: Broadcast, Multicast.
SoberIT Software Business and Engineering Institute HELSINKI UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY © Tomi Männistö, Varvana Myllärniemi, 2008 T Software Architectures.
Week 7 Quiz P1 Zach Meier, Joe Mikula. Question 1 Which of the following is independent of the choice of a DBMS? Answer: A ERDs are simply a way to represent.
Metadata Driven Statistical Data Warehouse System at the Hungarian Central Statistical Office Imre Pap Senior IT Advisor Hungarian Central Statistical.
Lecture 1: Introduction – Graduation Projects Topics to Discuss in Lectures 1. Project Deliverables 2. Course grading 3. Project Concept Writing.
Overview of Socio-cognitive Engineering General requirements Theory of Use Design Concept Contextual Studies Task model Design space System specification.
Week 7 Lecture Part 2 Introduction to Database Administration Samuel S. ConnSamuel S. Conn, Asst Professor.
CSE 303 Course Outline (Part 2) Text Book: Database System Concepts 6 th Edition by Abraham Silberschatz, Henry F. Korth and S. Sudarshan.
IST 210 Database Design Process IST 210, Section 1 Todd S. Bacastow January 2004.
SYSTEM ANALYSIS AND DESIGN LAB NARZU TARANNUM(NAT)
1 Lecture1 Introduction to Databases Systems Database 1.
Final Review Systems Analysis and Design in a Changing World, 4th Edition 1 Final Review u Chapters 1-6, 8-10, 13, 14, 15 u Multiple choice, short answer,
OBJECT ORIENTED VS STRUCTURED WHICH ONE IS YOUR CHOICE.
CPMGT 300 Week 3 Learning Team Planning Process Groups and Developing the Scope Check this A+ tutorial guideline at
Systems Analysis and Design in a Changing World, Fifth Edition
CompSci 280 S Introduction to Software Development
5/11/2018.
Outline Types of Databases and Database Applications Basic Definitions
This project is co-funded by the European Union
Project Title Presented By Student1 name - Roll no
Chapter 6 Database Design
Software Measurement Process ISO/IEC
إستراتيجيات ونماذج التقويم
Project Phases ‘98 ‘00 ‘02 ‘04 ‘06 Preparatory Phase
Presented By Student1 name - Roll no Student2 name - Roll no
CEN 5011 Advanced Software Engineering
Presentation transcript:

Topics to be presented Adv. Databases and Dataware Houses Topics to be presented by students 1.Indexing DW (Bitmap, MDX, X-Tree, UB-Tree, etc.) ( approx. In Week of 17 March) 2.DW Products evaluation (SAS, Cognos, Oracle Express, MicroStrategy, Hyperion Essbase) ( approx. in Week 24 March) 3.Recovery, Concurrency, Distributed DBMS ( after the Week of 24 March)

Term Projects In your term project, you will bring together concepts and tools, in order to develop a complete DW application of your choice. Your project evaluation will be based on: Your Project Proposal (Week 3); A first deliverable (Week 9), consisting of your design and application description A final deliverable (Week 14), consisting of your complete application using desktop without web capabilities; along with a final report and demo. Demo and Presentation: You will be required to present your project and do a Demo.

Term Project (cont.) Project Proposal including (Feb, 5 12:00) –Project name, project description, project objectives, limitations – Requirement Specifications: describe in detail you application requirements, a set of functionalities that your application will support by indicate clearly the context, the scope, example input and output, and the processing used to implement the requirement (Hint: Refer to chapter 7 in the book of Software Engineering, Ian Sommerville, for details on how to write the requirements specifications). –Project Plan incl. time, tasks and responsibilities

A first deliverable (March, 21 12:00 ) Conceptual design Data model: fact table, dimensions that supports the different requirements and the business process you have defined in the first phase. Architecture Tools to be used A mid report: describing your data model, application design and your design decisions (why you have designed it this way). The report should detail all the previous points.

A final deliverable (April 25, 12:00 ) A final deliverable, consisting of your complete application using desktop or web capabilities; along with a final report and demo. Demo and Presentation (week of 28 April): You will be required to present your project and do a Demo.