Mike Weiss, NASDAQ - PentahoWorld 2015 - #PWorld15 - #theCUBE
01. Mike Weiss, NASDAQ, Visits #theCUBE!. (00:20) 02. What Is Your Role With NASDAQ. (00:44) 03. How Has Managing The Data Warehouse Changed. (01:09) 04. What's Changed In The Past Twelve Months. (02:33) 05. What Are You Seeing In The Market Place. (03:29) 06. Talk About Your Infrastructure. (04:40) 07. Does Kinesis Fit Into Your Plans. (05:50) 08. What Would You Be Able To Do If You Were In A Low Latency Pipeline. (06:20) 09. What Is The Process Of Operationalizing And Getting It To Users. (08:15) 10. What About The Secret Sauce Of Imbedding Analytics Into Operational Procedures. (09:28) 11. Where Are You In Traditional Reporting Versus Perscriptive Reporting. (10:48) 12. Are You Trying To Make A Judgement As To What Dimentions Companies Want To See. (13:06) 13. How Does The Pipeline Look Different From When You Used Data Warehouse. (13:41) 14. What Are You Doing On Prem. (15:12) 15. How Much Data Do You Do In A Day. (15:38) 16. How Has Your Tool Evolution Progressed. (16:41) 17. Is The Key Agility. (17:53) 18. Do You Need Presto, Parquet and Redshift To Make Things Easier. (18:15) 19. It's Complicated To Get Things Up And Running With Hadoop. (18:58) 20. Do You See The Native Cloud Services As Potential Competitors. (20:31) Track List created with http://www.vinjavideo.com. --- --- NASDAQ streamlines data with Amazon AWS, Redshift | #pworld15 by Heather Johnson | Oct 14, 2015 Nasdaq, Inc. has a history of staying on top of its data. As it should, considering the volume of data the stock exchange sees on a daily basis. After moving to Amazon Web Services, Inc. and Redshift, the company cut costs and improved efficiency. “AWS makes it easier to manage provisions, scale-up, scale-down and really use what we need,” said NASDAQ Senior Manager Michael Weiss, who sat down with Dave Vellante and George Gilbert, cohosts of theCUBE, from the SiliconANGLE Media team, during PentahoWorld 2015. “We also cut costs significantly by using Redshift. We’re plan to make further cost reductions by moving to our new NASDAQ data platform.” The new platform will be built on top of Amazon S3, which will be built on top of Amazon EMR and SQL engine Presto to maintain longer data history. “We have a lot of SQL servers that have data from 2000, 2001, and we haven’t empowered the analysts to easily take that data, look at it and see historical trends,” said Weiss. “That’s what we’re focusing on now.” Gilbert asked Weiss if platforms such as AWS would eventually compete with a Hadoop ecosystem approach. Weiss sees them as complementary. “Public cloud offerings are way more viable than private cloud from a cost perspective,” he said. “I think they can complement each other in the long run.” @theCUBE #PWorld15