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Showing posts with label Oracle OpenWorld. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oracle OpenWorld. Show all posts

27 September 2016

Oracle Open World 2016, Day 3 & 4, social happenings, Essbase Cloud, and Groovy

The Road to Hell

Are paved with such high and alas obviously unrealistic hopes for myself when it comes to live blogging.  I’m not sure if it’s because I’m lazy (‘natch, I am), or if it’s because I tweet so much nonsense and have thus shot my social media bolt, or if I come back to laziness.  I think I pick the first and the third option.

So what am I going to do?

I am not going to bore you with tales of talking with Oracle.  Yeah, yeah, oh Cameron you are so great, blah, blah, blah.  The fact is, Oracle product management hang out by their pods.  And they present.  

You want to meet the VP of Development for Essbase?  Kumar was right there.  You want to talk to Planning/PBCS/EPBCS’ product manager?  Shankar was right there.  Good grief, if I can talk to them, you can too.  I have no lock on talking to people although my father has said multiple times that I kissed the Blarney Stone.  However, loquaciousness as a personality attribute is open to all.  I encourage you to come to Open World just as I encourage you to come to Kscope as well as meetups.  Networking = access = knowledge = sharing = Success!  Boil in Bag!

With that, this post is going to be a mix of the social – networking face to face is the essence of a conference – and cool new product features.  

The Social

As I wrote, product demos and sessions are one half of any conference; the people are the other side of things.  One day all of this will be dust, but the relationships will abide.

ACEDs = geeks

I can no longer remember if this was the Wednesday before the ACED briefings or some time during.  It all begins to blur after a while.  

From left to right, Celvin, Yr. Obt. Svt., MMIC aka Glenn Schwartzberg, John Booth, Eric Helmer, and Tim Tow.  The geekiness (note that I did not write intelligence) emanating from that table was impressive, sort of.

Bros

Here’s my younger, smarter, taller brother from a completely different set of parents, Celvin Kattookaran.  Celvin differs from my other brother-from-another-set-of-parents aka Glenn Schwartzberg in that I think Celvin actually likes this not-familial connection.  Or he’s really good at lying.

Meetup

Meetups are my real passion – lightweight, informal, fun, and grassroots.  The big conferences – Kscope and OOW – are great but the real opportunities to meet people and really make that connection come from the small events.  

Most excellent

Tim Tow and I hosted our fourth annual Tim and Cameron’s Most Excellent EPM Meetup.  It was the best ever this year and we got to look at the dodecahedron sculpture that leant its name to Tim’s flagship Essbase product, Dodeca.


SF Meetup

Two meetups in one week?  Yup.  Here’s Natalie Delemar, ODTUG president, and Jason Jones trying not to laugh at my inept photographic skills.

The meetup took place at SalesForce’s office, a mere 15 minute walk from the Moscone center.

Here’s the meetup panel:  Edward Roske, Tim Tow, Yr, Obt. Svt., and Natalie Delemar.

The same group but now with Michael Zazzera and Frank Chow bracketing us.

Concert

The madness that is the Wednesday night event was upon us.  This is not my kind of music but I suppose it’s a bit much to hope for someone of the likes of The Misty Miss Christy.  Right, there is a pretty low chance of that.

I found it telling that there were a thousand geeks recording Gwen Stefani but no so many with Sting.  Age of fans?  Relative popularity?  Beats me, cf. my taste in music.  

The food was immeasurably better this year.  Candlestick (I refuse to call it AT&T) Park is a far better venue than Treasure Island.  Whoops, a correction on the park name from Frank Chow:

Have a correction for your post... Candlestick park is a different park which was located near to south San Francisco and already got demolished. AT&T park was originally named as Pacific Bell Park, then later on got renamed to SBC park. Then got rename to AT&T park after AT&T acquired Pacific Bell (SBC).

That seems like a simple explanation.  :)  With that error corrected...

Okay, I’ve covered the social side of things.  Now on to the product demos.

 

All about Essbase Cloud née EssCS

I was very happy to see this.  I think these are the first extensive public pictures of Essbase Cloud.

Top drawer stuff.

OMG, we’re back to Excel.  App Man never died!

Build it in a spreadsheet, show it in a outline.  There is no need for a connection to the cloud.  Build anywhere.  OMG.

Oracle have really thought this through.  From the outline to the sheet.  And back.  Per ardua ad astra indeed.


Did I mention that Essbase Cloud will dynamically build the “load rule” sheets from a sample outline?


Build it here, build it there, build it anywhere, Essbase chases it everywhere.  I have now set back Anglo-French relations 200 years.  


Write formulas in the editor and write back to the sheet.

Did I mention this is cool?  And this is just the outline editor.  I’m not going to repeat (most of) Tim Tow’s recap on Essbase Cloud – Read The Whole Thing – but I am most excited about a true Java agent (no more cross dim limitations in Hybrid) and the above Excel->Essbase->Excel functionality.  Oh yeah, having it in the cloud is kind of cool, too.

Essbase and Groovy

I’d be remiss in not mentioning this session – Celvin gave an absolutely brilliant presentation on self-modifying Essbase calc scripts (actually Calculation Manager business rules so Essbase but not entirely) via Groovy.  Want to write a focused aggregation?  How about at the row level?  Column level?  Cell level?  Amazing stuff and OMG fast.  There's quite a bit of that OMG on my part but it was that kind of conference.



A few last thoughts

It was a great albeit exhausting conference as OOW always is.

The drumbeat of Cloud, Cloud, Cloud was and is impossible to ignore.  It’s a sea change in computing and at this point is impossible to ignore.  You may not be on the Cloud and perhaps it isn’t a fit for you, yet, but I guarantee that it will be.  Don’t be a King Canute.

Be seeing you.

18 September 2016

Oracle Open World 2016, Day 0

Another year, another week of live blogging madness…

…that goes by the name Oracle Open World.  Yes, it’s here – here being San Francisco, the City By The Bay.
I struggled on numbering this post – is it day -1 (OOW opens tomorrow) or day -3 (I was here for the ACED briefings on Thursday and Friday last) – and reasoned that the whole number before 1 is 0 and as tomorrow is the 1st today must be day 0.  I know we’ve all enjoyed this lesson in 2nd grade math.
Unlike Kscope, OOW is in SF every year.  Beyond actually being able to find restaurants, coffee shops, etc. year over year, it is a fun place to be for a conference.  If one were to measure the suitability of a city based on the number of songs written about it – yes this is a strange metric but bear with me – the Great American Songbook proves it although they are all strangely downbeat.  Chicago it ain’t but I note ODTUG managed to have a conference there on the basis of only two songs.  Actually, this may not be a good criteria.  No matter.

I hear music

What are the (well at least my) songs about the city?  San Francisco Blues – Peggy Lee, Got My Gate on the Golden Gate – Mel Tormé, and of course I Left My Heart in San Francisco – Dean Martin, Perry Como, and of course Tony Bennett. Yes, three singers on the last song but is the iconic SF song and besides Dino in concert is hilarious, Mr. C is sooo relaxing,  and it’s Tony Bennett’s song.
There’s others as well.  On a slightly more positive note, but not really because it’s about the Big One:  San Francisco – Judy Garland.  And then a really cool police procedural one, The Streets of San Francisco.
Alas, while there are many songs about San Francisco, there are no songs about Oracle Open World.  Of course there is that Wednesday night event although I am likely hoping in vain for Anthony Dominick Benedetto as the star attraction next year.
No matter, the world+dog doesn’t share my taste in music, and this blog isn’t likely to change anyone’s mind.  But I have (maybe) encouraged you to open your mind to new horizons.

Speaking of new horizons

As noted, I attended the ACE Director briefing two days before the show and then the EPM Partner meeting yesterday (I’m sort of astounded that Yr. Obt. Svt. is invited to either one but I never argue with good fortune) and the NDA and even CDA is, to put it mildly, restrictive.  
Given that, I can’t really provide any details but I’ll give you the whole Magillah in a one word speech:  Cloud.
Yup, that was a tease.  Sorry.
Seriously, if you’re involved in EPM in any way, get your head around cloud, cloud, cloud.  Buy me a cup of coffee some time and I’ll give you my 2¢ on whether that’s a good, bad, or indifferent idea.  From a product perspective, funding coming to these products is beyond fantastic.
But what won’t be a tease will be what I’m going to try to do this year.  To wit: daily blogging, hopefully live, and lots of coverage on Twitter at @CameronLackpour.  With this kind of event, Twitter occurs as it happens, the blog happens at night.
Be seeing you.
P.S.  Be happy:  I have shot my bolt re musical links from your grandparent’s years.  
P.P.S.  I actually did write this yesterday but forgot about it.  Yes, the madness is upon me.

22 October 2015

Oracle OpenWorld 2015 live blogging, Tim and Cameron’s most excellent EPM meetup, and my EPM presentation

What am I doing here?

I’m sitting in at the ACE Directors briefing hearing about all sorts of cool stuff.  It is an incredible opportunity to hear about what Oracle will be doing.  Unfortunately I’m not at liberty to share what I’m seeing as I just signed an NDA but rest assured this is a company that knows where it’s going and that destination is exciting.  

As to how I got here, I have no idea why I became this lucky but as Gary Crisci once said, “Never argue with good luck” and I’m not going to.

The bragging is over

The above isn’t really bragging but instead just a way to share with you that (warning, a bit of gushing is about to hit you) Oracle really is geared towards developers.  Essbase (and the rest of the EPM suite) was lucky Oracle saw value in Hyperion.  Hyperion was a great company – and many of the movers and shakers remain today at Oracle --- but I cannot imagine them having the resources or even the vision to try new things like Oracle.  Sometimes big is a really good thing and that’s coming from someone who is a one man shop.  

Live blogging

As in previous years, I’ll be blogging at least once and maybe multiple times per day as the opportunity presents itself.  I’ll also be tweeting.  In short I am social media maven.  Or loser who needs to get a life outside of technology.  Or both.  You decide.

The meetup

As in years past, Tim Tow and I will be hosting an EPM/BI Meetup on Tuesday, 27 October 2015, at the Hyatt Regency Eclipse Lounge.  It starts at 7:00 pm and goes till…whenever they kick us out.  It’s a ton of fun, a great opportunity to network with both your peers as well as Oracle (no promises on the latter, but there’s a good chance) development and product management.    All are welcome.

The presentation

I’ll be presenting on Sunday, 25 October 2015, in Moscone South 302, from 11:00 to 11:45 on “ASO, BSO, or Hybrid:  Which flavor of Essbase should you use?”  Unfortunately, I’m too stupid or lazy to figure out how to link from the OpenWorld schedule builder, but I hope you’ll be able to attend my session as well as all of the User Group sessions.  

On offer there will be:
  • Oracle Business Intelligence Enterprise Edition the Oracle Smart View Way [UGF4112] Wayne Van Sluys, 9:00 am
  • Creative Oracle Hyperion Planning Design: With Planning, There Is No Box [UGF7215] Edward Roske, 10:00 am
  • ASO, BSO, or Hybrid: Which Flavor of Oracle Essbase Should You Use? [UGF2145] Yr. Obt. Svt., 11:00 am
  • Oracle Hyperion Profitability and Cost Management for Hyperion Planning/Oracle Essbase Users [UGF9979] Michael Killeen, 12:00 pm
  • Advanced Calculations in Calculation Manager [UGF9983] Ron Moore, 1:30 pm
  • BSO to ASO: Can We? Should We? How Do We? [UGF10834] Sarah Zumbrum, 2:30 pm
  • Aggregate to Transaction Level with Oracle Essbase and Oracle BI Enterprise Edition [UGF9982] Dave Collins, 3:30 pm

As noted, all of these EPM sessions will be in Moscone South, room 302.  There’s no reason to leave the room save for bio breaks and is the most EPM focused segment of OpenWorld.  There’s lots of other content but not in such an nonstop manner.

And that’s it for now

It’ll be an exciting week.  If you’re physically here in San Francisco, I hope you’ll be able to attend the above.  If you’re experiencing OpenWorld from afar, hopefully my seemingly-endless-penchant-for-blathering-on will prove of value.

Be seeing you.

01 October 2014

Oracle OpenWorld 2014, day 4

The craziness continues, part the fourth

I am slowing down.  No, not because I am old and feeble (definitely something to look forward to but not just yet) but because I am not getting enough sleep.  I don’t even seem to be able to get enough energy to take pictures.  Or attend that many sessions.  For shame, but I’ve been at this a week already (remember I was here four days before OpenWorld actually began), I’m running out of clean clothes (possibly too much information?), and I’m just…well, tired.  See, the craziness continues bit wasn’t exaggeration on my part.

At the same time, OpenWorld is a great place to catch up with otherwise virtual friends, fly the ODTUG flag, and meet with key Oracle personnel.  

So no complaints on my side, other than my inability to discipline myself to go to bed early.  That’s hardly the fault of Oracle, but instead the fault of Cameron.

Yesterday

We had quite the blowout at the meetup Tim Tow and I hosted.  So fun, so much talking, so much networking that I forgot (gasp) to take photos or ask others to do the same.  So unfortunately, just the one picture I took at the beginning.  As always, it was nice to see familiar faces and meet in a relaxed forum.  You should join us next year.  :)  And take photos so yr. obt. svt. would have something to post.

And today

CON8532  --  Product Development Panel Q&A: Oracle Hyperion EPM Applications

Talk about more stars than there are in heaven, at least if heaven is defined as Oracle development management.

Left to right from your perspective, Gentle Reader, is:  Matt Bradley, Kash Mohammed, mystery HFM development manager (sorry, I am HFM-stupid or I would know who this is), Prasad Kulkarni, and Toufic Wakim.

CON7615  --  Oracle Exalytics In-Memory Machine: The Fast Path to In-Memory Analytics

I’m listening to Gabby Rubin speak right now re Exalytics.  There is a ton of true Business Intelligence offerings on Exalytics – it’s way more than just OBIEE.  Try Endeca, in-memory engine (both Essbase and Oracle database), TimesTen, InfiniBand, and more cores than you can shake a stick at.  Essbase has grown and grown and, unlike me, isn’t getting tired.

CON8546  --  Oracle Enterprise Performance Management on Mobile

Here’s Al Marciante talking about mobile, EPM, and cloud:

What I am very glad to hear is that my customers will not be Planning on their iPhone.  That was going to be ugly.  And tiny.

Financial Reports is coming (not soon, but it is coming) to mobile.

As is Smart View (yes) on MicroSoft’s Surface Pro tablet (which is essentially a Windows 8 computer).  

Planning on mobile:
  • Interface for tablets
  • Full write-back (so tiny type?)
    • Forms
    • Reports
    • Calc Man rules
  • HTML5 based
  • Consistent interface with Fusion applications

The other thing that is interesting is Oracle Financial Management Analysis on mobile.  Cool mashup of HFM and OBIEE without require a PhD in Oracle Business Intelligence.  I cannot wait for the Planning version of this.  

I will note that I am a bit of anomaly as I bang away at my laptop as mobile devices are absolutely everywhere at OpenWorld.  I do have my much-maligned phone, but I am sort of a minimalist when it comes to using it, although that may be a case of cutting my suit to fit my cloth.

What’s next?

If someone would send me snaps of last night’s meetup, I’d be happy to update this blog with them.  Hint.

I am not going to the event tonight.  Remember that bit above about tiredness.  I will likely (hopefully) have a quite dinner with a few of my friends and take some pictures this time to prove it.

Watch this blog for more information on the last (sob) day of OpenWorld.
Be seeing you.