| From: | John Anderson <panic-postgres(at)semiosix(dot)com> |
|---|---|
| To: | pgsql-hackers(at)postgresql(dot)org |
| Subject: | Re: MS interview |
| Date: | 2001-08-15 08:39:24 |
| Message-ID: | 3B7A353C.4070702@semiosix.com |
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| Lists: | pgsql-hackers |
Gavin Sherry wrote:
> Seems like a fairly large amount of talk about stuff which should be
taken
> care of internally by corporations who have such interests.
Not entirely. As a freelancer, I've used OLAP (front-end only, ie pivot
tables in Excel) to help me produce invoices from my timesheet data.
It's *very* useful. I found out, almost by accident, which client I've
spent the most time working for, and which client has the largest ratio
of unpaid to paid hours :-(
AFAIK, OLAP backends essentially provide a cache of denormalised data
that provide fast access (no need to re-run complex queries) to large
data sets, and a set of aggregate functions to analyse the data.
There's also a language called MDX that goes with it, but I haven't
worked with that.
bye
John
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