In-database processing: Difference between revisions

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==History==
Traditional approaches to data analysis require data to be moved out of the database into a separate analytics environment for processing, and then back to the database. ([[[SPSS]] from [[IBM]] areis the best examplesexample of toolstool that still do this today.) Doing the analysis in the database, where the data resides, eliminates the costs, time and security issues associated with the old approach by doing the processing in the data warehouse itself.<ref name="DBTA">{{citation|last=Das|first=Joydeep|title=Adding Competitive Muscle with In-Database Analytics|url=http://www.dbta.com/Articles/Editorial/Trends-and-Applications/Adding-Competitive-Muscle-with-In-Database-Analytics-67126.aspx|publisher=Database Trends & Applications|date=May 10, 2010}}</ref>
 
Though in-database capabilities were first commercially offered in the mid-1990s, as object-related database systems from vendors including IBM, [[Illustra]]/[[Informix]] (now IBM) and [[Oracle Corporation|Oracle]], the technology did not begin to catch on until the mid-2000s.<ref name="IE">{{citation|last=Grimes|first=Seth|title=In-Database Analytics: A Passing Lane for Complex Analysis|url=http://intelligent-enterprise.informationweek.com/info_centers/data_int/showArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=YH5ZICM4SKOMRQE1GHPSKH4ATMY32JVN?articleID=212500351&cid=RSSfeed_IE_News|publisher=Intelligent Enterprise|date=December 15, 2008}}</ref>