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Showing posts with label user conferences. Show all posts
Showing posts with label user conferences. Show all posts

18 May 2015

I don’t ordinarily write about conferences other than Kscope, but when I do…

…I write about the Rittman Mead BI Forum 2015

Tim German and I just spoke at Rittman Mead’s annual BI Forum.  Alas, we didn’t go to the one in Brighton (I attended the Comshare EMEA conference there in 1992 but I cannot find any links to it – I think it was in the hotel the IRA tried to assassinate Margaret Thatcher in although I note that RM’s conference was in a different hotel).  Instead we went to the one in Atlanta (come think of it, I believe I attended a Comshare conference there as well – maybe 1991?  1993?  I can’t remember for the life of me.) and it was absolutely brilliant.

Why?  I find technology just fascinating (erm, you would imagine that based on this blog) and the presented technology at this level is all new to me.  Fascinating.
NB – For those of you who think this is a sycophantic recounting of their conference, it isn’t.  I’m pretty hard to impress and I was just blown away by the conference.  Think of this post as enthusiasm and well deserved at that.

NB #2 – Mark went out of his way to let the two token Essbase guys feel at home.  Many thanks, Mark.

Day by day

Day 0

The conference started out with a master class on Oracle Big Data.  We’ve all heard a lot of hype and hyperbole about Big Data.  I have to say that after watching Jordan Meyer and Mark present on it, I think Big Data might just deserve it all.  I also have to admit this is the first time I’ve had a bird’s eye view of R, EDA, Oracle Big Data SQL, and I-don’t-know-how-many-other-techologies, but the kinds of data, the statistical analyses, and reporting just blew me away, as did the rest of the conference.

Day 1 & 2

Rather than try to give my impressions of each one of the sessions, which would be difficult ‘cos I was mostly completely at sea, the conference covered subjects and technologies that are not in the toolkit of at least this Essbase hacker.  I’ll list it and try to give you a feel of my overall impression of the conference.

The list


  • Brian MacDonald or Chris Lynskey, Oracle Corporation : “Looking Ahead to Oracle BI 12c and Visual Analyzer”
  • Robin Moffatt, Rittman Mead : “Smarter Regression Testing for OBIEE”
  • Bill Creekbaum and Gabby Rubin, Oracle Corporation : “Solid Standing for Analytics in the Cloud”
  • Hasso Schaap, Qualogy : “Developing strategic analytics applications on OBICS PaaS”
  • Tim German / Cameron Lackpour, Qubix / CLSolve : “Hybrid Mode – An Essbase Revolution”
  • Kevin McGinley, Red Pill Analytics, “Agile BI Applications: A Case Study”
  • Stewart Bryson, Red Pill Analytics, “Supercharge BI Delivery with Continuous Integration”
  • Ryan Stark or Chris Lynskey, Oracle Corporation : “Big Data Discovery”
  • Andy Rocha & Pete Tamisin, Rittman Mead : “OBIEE Can Help You Achieve Your GOOOOOOOOOALS!”
  • Christian Screen, Sierra-Cedar : “10 Tenants for Making Your Oracle BI Applications Project Succeed Like a Boss”
  • Sumit Sarkar, Progress Software : “Make sense of NoSQL data using OBIEE”

All of the sessions were good (somehow I think even the session Tim and I presented on Hybrid was at least adequate – sorry Tim), but the ones that I found most fascinating were the conceptual ones that could apply to EPM as well.  Robin’s presentation in particular really hit home as it captured the kind of structure and rigor that we should be bringing to testing in EPM projects.  Stewart also almost made me believe in Agile, which is really quite an accomplishment.  Even the more BI-specific technologies and approaches were absolutely fascinating.

A data visualization bake off allowed BI geeks to take a known dataset around public school classroom projects that need funding and presented their solution at the conference.  Sorry, I can’t tell you who won as I was continuing my OMG-this-is-so-f’ing-cool bit of shock and awe, but both of the solutions were really great.

There was also a debate on self-service BI vs. the traditional IT-oriented and controlled top down BI.  Oddly, there was quite a bit of discussion about buffets vs. Michelin three star restaurants (it was a metaphor for the different kinds of BI but it all left me a bit puckish).  I have to say that I was on the side of the former – this is where Essbase got its start and where my heart with the product still is.  Empowering people to take control of their data is one of the things that makes Essbase so great.  Self-service won.  :)

In action

If you want to download the presentations have a look here.

Want to see us in action?  Check us out on Flickr.

One other thing

This sounds kind of ridiculous, but the food at this conference was just fantastic.  Perhaps that’s down to the hotel, or perhaps the small size (60-ish) which allowed a different kind of buffet

Wrapping it all up

Will I go again?  If I can afford it (remember, yr. obt. svt. funds himself) yes, I will.  It was that good.

Thanks again to RM for inviting Tim and I to present and hopefully we didn’t let the Essbase side down.

Be seeing you.

09 February 2014

Two fantastic regional user conferences

There is more to BI/EPM conference life than Kscope.  I know, hard to believe, but it’s true, I promise you.  Don’t believe me?  Read on, Gentle Reader, and all will be revealed.

Sometimes a chance remark makes things happen

Over on the Network54 Essbase page, there was a thread about regional user conferences in the days of Hyperion and how there really isn’t anything today to take their place.  Never one to pass up stealing other people’s ideas miss an inspiring thought, I took this comment from the mysterious “RIM” to ODTUG, ODTUG did their usual hard work, and the result of their effort is this regional Chicago ramp-up to Kscope14.

The speakers below are all Kscope veterans – think of this as a preview to Kscope and all the more reason why you should be in Seattle as well.

When, where, what, and how to sign up

When

21 February 2014, 12:45 to 5 pm

Where

Oracle’s regional Chicago office, 233 South Wacker Drive, 45th floor, rooms 45014/45015/45016

What

  • Shared Services API – Oracle ACE Celvin Kattookaran
  • Exalytics Performance – Oracle ACE John Booth and Tim German
  • BI Solutions with Oracle Analytics – Dave Collins
  • Financial Close Management – Jim Springer

These are fantastic speakers and content and the cost is absolutely zero, zilch, nada, you get the idea – FREE.  It is rather difficult to argue with that price.

How

If you are interested, and I cannot imagine how any Chicago area BI/EPM practitioner would not be, sign up here.  

Thanks to all of the speakers for taking time to do this, ODTUG for organizing it, and of course Oracle for providing the meeting venue.

I wish, wish, wish I could be at the meeting but alas I cannot.  It will be that good and it is a regional user conference not to be missed.

What’s Round on the Ends and High in the Middle?

O-hi-o.  

Sorry, that joke has been bouncing around my head since I saw the film Third Finger, Left Hand and heard Melvyn Douglas sing that particular ditty.  Lest you roll your eyes at yet another old movie reference, take a good look at Myrna Loy.  Phwoar.  It's also a pretty funny movie.

Why the reference to the Buckeye State?  That’s where the Northeast Ohio Oracle Users Group (NEOOUG) is holding their annual Great Lakes Oracle Conference (GLOC).  If you are an Oracle practitioner in the Midwest, this conference is right up your alley, as is the user group itself.

When, where, what, and how to sign up

When

The Great Lakes Oracle User Conference is 13 to 14 May, 2014.  The pre-conference seminars (of which more anon) are 12 May.

Where

Student Center 3rd floor ballroom foyer at Cleveland State University

See
here for hotel and more detailed information.

What

GLOC is not primarily a BI/EPM user conference.  Yes, for Essbase hackers aka the Best and Brightest aka whoever reads this blog, it is sometimes difficult to realize how small a part of Oracle’s universe we are but it is The Awful Truth.  Don’t view that as a bad thing, but instead see it as an opportunity to broaden your horizons.  You may have noted that this blog actually covers a whole bunch of technologies, Essbase included.  I do that not because I am sort of wonderful renaissance man, but because that is simply what it takes to succeed in IT.  I expect you do the same.

With that broad technology interest in mind, take a look at what NEOOUG have on offer.

Keynote speakers

GLOC has not one but two keynote speakers:
  • Tom Kyte – Sharpening your Memory: A look at the Oracle in Memory Database
  • Steven Feuerstein – Coding Therapy for Software Developers aka How Does This Code Make You Feel?

I saw Tom present at NZOUG 2013 and he was not half bad.  :)  All kidding aside, Tom is a bit legendary as is Steve.  Both sessions will be beyond interesting.

Session Tracks

As I wrote, this conference (just like Kscope) is all things to all men, or at least tries very hard to speak to much of the world that defines Oracle:
  • Application Development
  • DBA
  • Data Warehousing/BI (see, I lied, there is BI/EPM content here)
  • System Architecture/Administration

That’s 30 sessions in total over two days and these look like really geeky sessions based on their titles.  Click here to Read The Whole Thing.

Still accepting abstracts

Despite the above agenda, the deadline for abstracts is still open, and will be till 16 February 2014.  

Workshops

GLOC kicks off with a full day of preconference workshops.

So far, the workshops consist of:
  • Oracle Performance Tuning 101 – Carlos Sierra and Mauro Pagano
  • From Relational to Hadoop – Migrating Your Data Pipeline – Alex Gorbachev
  • APEX Hands-On Crash Course – Scott Spendolini
Speaking of which…
GLOC’s workshops will also have (assuming of course that NEOOUG accepts my summary and abstract, so maybe yes, maybe no) a three hour Introduction to Essbase seminar given by yr. obdnt. srvnt. to be given on 12 May 2014.

You say that you don’t see the workshop on the link (at least at the time of the writing of this post)?  That is because I have (ahem) yet to submit the summary and abstract.  All I can plead is that I am a tad over committed.  Sometimes I even get to sleep – really, if I could just remove that trifle of biological function, I’d be set from a do-all-the-cool-stuff-I-do-outside-of-work.  Thomas Edison claimed that sleep was a waste of time.   A man can dream.  Or not.

Putting aside unrealistic dreams (ahem yet again), I did just suffer a two day power outage complete with downed power lines trapping me on my street.  I viewed this as a gift as it allowed me time away from an awful lot of distractions (you know, like paying work) and I have now written, on paper (hey, no power = no typing it up) a seven page outline of what I want to cover.  Ambitious?  Yes, but I think it will be a killer intro to Essbase.   
Here’s the summary
To relational people, Essbase is a strange creature.  It’s not a relational database, but it’s owned by Oracle.  Essbase can speak SQL, but you cannot run a SQL query against it.  Financial users love it, IT departments are puzzled by it.  What is Essbase and why should you care?  This three hour seminar will give you a firm grounding on what Essbase is, how it works, and what it’s like to develop in Essbase.

I've got fingers crossed on the abstract getting accepted.

How

Signing up couldn’t be easier.  Simply click right here and sign up.  You’ll (hopefully) soon see my workshop there.  I’ll be submitting the abstract just after this blog post goes up, I promise you.

Wrapping it up

So yes, there is quite a bit more to user group life beyond Kscope.

The first regional Kickoff to Kscope user group meeting (may it be one of many that ODTUG will put on in future) is in Chicago and is focused on BI/EPM.  If you are in the area, it is a do-not-miss event.  It’s coming up soon, 21 February 2104, and you can sign up right here.

The second, rather larger, Great Lakes Oracle Conference is also chock full of awesomeness.  Maybe it will even include me and my ever so slightly awkward love of all things Essbase.  Don’t forget that it isn’t too late for you to submit your own abstract for a session and have the conference fee waived.

Be seeing you.