AnyBook4Less.com
Find the Best Price on the Web
Order from a Major Online Bookstore
Developed by Fintix
Home  |  Store List  |  FAQ  |  Contact Us  |  
 
Ultimate Book Price Comparison Engine
Save Your Time And Money

Common Warehouse Metamodel: An Introduction to the Standard for Data Warehouse Integration

Please fill out form in order to compare prices
Title: Common Warehouse Metamodel: An Introduction to the Standard for Data Warehouse Integration
by John Poole, Dan Chang, Douglas Tolbert, David Mellor
ISBN: 0-471-20052-2
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Pub. Date: 15 November, 2001
Format: Paperback
Volumes: 1
List Price(USD): $34.99
Your Country
Currency
Delivery
Include Used Books
Are you a club member of: Barnes and Noble
Books A Million Chapters.Indigo.ca

Average Customer Rating: 3.86 (7 reviews)

Customer Reviews

Rating: 2
Summary: Worryingly vague and unimplementable
Comment: I'll say at the start that this is not my kind of book. I prefer books which are useful, enlightening or both. This didn't seem to be either. From page 3: "The mission of this book is to provide a single, coherent, and comprehensive overview of the OMG's Common Warehouse Metamodel, which is easy to read.". It may be slightly easier to read than the raw specification, but it's a lot less useful. The most telling point is further down the same page where it admits to really being just an introduction to a forthcoming "Warehouse Metamodel Developers Guide".

For an overview, the book is really short on examples. It's got lots of vague UML diagrams and pretty pictures like you might see on a powerpoint slide, but not a single worked example to show how all the buzzwords and technologies might actually fit together. I also have great problems with their use of UML as a language to actually specify data models, processes and so on. For me UML is a tool to help express intentions to people, not supply details to processing software, but this book seems to ignore the difference.

If you know nothing about meta-modelling, and want the sort of information you can get from the slides of a conference presentation, this may be a useful book. If you want to understand the details, or (gosh) actually get a job done, then this book will just frustrate you.

Rating: 5
Summary: Good overview for good technology
Comment: I can't believe the previous reviewer. He basically said he didn't like CWM or UML, therefore the book is obviously bad ?!?

The project I am just starting is a large data mining effort that will be integrating multiple data warehouse and data mining tools. I knew we needed CWM from some earlier work with metadata repositories, but did not have the energy to dig into the OMG specification. This book gave me exactly the overview I was looking for; as an earlier author said, "This book covers all the practical steps for planning, implementing, and deploying CWM technologies". I would like to give it at least 7 stars to average out the previous irrelevant review...

Rating: 1
Summary: The emperor has no clothes
Comment: Ok, I am a known heretic. I am not impressed by the CWM model. It is oriented toward the object-oriented implementation of a tool for metadata exchange, not toward representing the things business people would be looking for in a meta data repository.

This book is better than the on-line specification at describing the model--which was really incomprehensible--but this is at the expense of completeness. Definitions are not available for all classes and the ones that are are not clear (to me at least). The relationships are barely defined at all.

In fairness, the model is so complex that it may not be possible to describe clearly to anyone not deeply immersed in the language of object-orientation. The team of authors is further hampered by its use of UML. The notation does not permit a complete inheritance tree to be portrayed in a diagram if the diagram is of less than the entire model. Two classes may be related, but you can't see this because the relationship is between great grandparents, shown on a different page.

Similar Books:

Title: Common Warehouse Metamodel Developer's Guide
by John Poole, Dan Chang, Douglas Tolbert, David Mellor
ISBN: 0471202436
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Pub. Date: 07 January, 2003
List Price(USD): $50.00
Title: Metadata Solutions: Using Metamodels, Repositories, XML, and Enterprise Portals to Generate Information on Demand
by Adrienne Tannenbaum
ISBN: 0201719762
Publisher: Addison-Wesley Pub Co
Pub. Date: 14 August, 2001
List Price(USD): $44.99
Title: Building and Managing the Meta Data Repository: A Full Lifecycle Guide
by David Marco
ISBN: 0471355232
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Pub. Date: 17 July, 2000
List Price(USD): $60.00
Title: Model Driven Architecture: Applying MDA to Enterprise Computing
by David S. Frankel
ISBN: 0471319201
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Pub. Date: 10 January, 2003
List Price(USD): $40.00
Title: Building the Data Warehouse (3rd Edition)
by W. H. Inmon
ISBN: 0471081302
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Pub. Date: 15 March, 2002
List Price(USD): $55.00

Thank you for visiting www.AnyBook4Less.com and enjoy your savings!

Copyright� 2001-2021 Send your comments

Powered by Apache