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Group D New Environments and Data Management System Issues
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March 31, 1998NSF IDM 98, Group D2 Mission Statement Determine how information systems can exploit and operate in a computing environment that is increasingly interconnected, distributed, heterogeneous and dynamic.
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March 31, 1998NSF IDM 98, Group D3 Big ‘n’ Wide Large number of entities, wide area many rules, distributed events 100s of DBs interoperating at a company #’s of clients - bring your own cycles middleware workflows across autonomous systems wide area consistency management
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March 31, 1998NSF IDM 98, Group D4 Smart Shopper DB Cost and Quality conscious –Tradeoffs on latency, concurrency, correctness, completeness, resource usage (including user time).
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March 31, 1998NSF IDM 98, Group D5 The database that never forgets Personal/group archive: Data live-ness: media rollover Multi-schema support Locating data
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March 31, 1998NSF IDM 98, Group D6 No-fuss data management Rich set of choices for physical organization and access methods; have to spoon-feed databases; have to manage data after extraction Automated tuning Reorganization tools System configuration + reconfiguration Easy in and out Reduce cost ($+m) of database ownership
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March 31, 1998NSF IDM 98, Group D7 Cradle-to-grave data management Really conception-to-grave, data is never “outside” the database Direct capture instead of store+load Necessary to do provenance OS knows about all processing, why not DB knows about all data
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March 31, 1998NSF IDM 98, Group D8 Data logistics Tend to view DB as a static thing, but the value of data is only realized when it moves Data product manufacturing Adaptive dissemination Value-added brokering, reselling, pressing Zero latency, instant data Variable infrastructure Push and broadcast
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March 31, 1998NSF IDM 98, Group D9 All the data all the time Can reach every piece of data from every place Never-fail Connectivity Media conversion
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March 31, 1998NSF IDM 98, Group D10 Spare Slogans Data addiction/data mainlining Knowledge Systems DB We put you in the driver’s seat: interactive query formulation and answering.
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March 31, 1998NSF IDM 98, Group D11 Application-aware information management Database takes responsibility for application characteristics Knows about end-to-end performance Knows about quality requirements and can negotiate trade-offs Fast wrong answers Event detection Aware of user interface Improves application characteristics – recovery Application models (equivalent of schemas) that lead to automated management
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March 31, 1998NSF IDM 98, Group D12 Applications International criminal DB All the data all the time Telecommunications Zero latency Workflows across autonomous systems wide are consistency management Medicine, Digital Patient Immediate collection of trauma, emergency data, more patient records, data capture, data staging Virtual enterprise, personal department store Information commerce Digital globe Producer side: Earth representation, 1m, 1pixel = 1 byte, ¾ ocean, fixed 10PB and EOS generates 4TB a day Consumer side: 40M kids, 100 images, 800PB delivered each day Digital city presented at the PI meeting.
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March 31, 1998NSF IDM 98, Group D13 Modes of Research DB/Medical informatics collaborations Intra-CS collaborations –OS, Distributed Systems, Networks, Languages, Software Architecture Counteracting conservatism among reviewers Speculative studies in context of initiative Extracting industry experience –Developer/Academic workshops
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