The End of Agile – Part 3 (What Is Agile Really?)
TDAN.com
by Larry Burns
2d ago
In the first article, I laid out the basic premise for this series: an examination of how Agile has gone from the darling of the application development community to a virtual pariah that nobody wants to be associated with, and an exploration of the very important question of what we should replace it with. We ..read more
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Data Lifecycle Management: Optimizing Data Storage, Usage, and Disposal
TDAN.com
by Ainsley Lawrence
2d ago
The use of data worldwide for business and recreation has exploded in the last decade, with an estimated 328.77 million terabytes of data created every single day globally. In 2024, experts predict that nearly 120 zettabytes of new data will be created. All of this data creation has also created a substantial storage problem for ..read more
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Crossing the Data Divide: AI Data Assistants — A Data Leader’s Force Multiplier
TDAN.com
by John Wills
2d ago
The focus of my last column, titled Crossing the Data Divide: Data Catalogs and the Generative AI Wave, was on the impact of large language models (LLM) and generative artificial intelligence (AI) and how we disseminate knowledge throughout the enterprise and the future role of the data catalogs. Spoiler alert if you have not read ..read more
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Data Governance Made Simple
TDAN.com
by William Burkett
2d ago
Those of us in the field of enterprise data management are familiar with the many authors contributing their knowledge and expertise to the data management body of knowledge.[1] We are also very familiar with the many, varied, and often conflicting ways in which data management terms are used. “Data architecture,” “data integration,” and even terms ..read more
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Data Professional Introspective: The Data Management Education Program
TDAN.com
by Melanie Mecca
2d ago
In my work with the EDM Council’s Data Management Capability Assessment Model (DCAM) 3.0 development group, we are adding a capability that has remained under the radar in our industry: the responsibility of the Data Management Program to determine concept and knowledge gaps within its staff resources. The organization should then plan, organize, and make ..read more
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Data Crime: Arizona Is Not Arkansas
TDAN.com
by Merrill Albert
2d ago
I call it a “data crime” when someone is abusing or misusing data. When we understand these stories and their implications, it can help us learn from mistakes and prevent future data crimes. The stories can also be helpful if you have to explain the importance of data management to someone. The Story After a series ..read more
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The End of Agile – Part 2 (Critiques of Agile)
TDAN.com
by Larry Burns
2w ago
In the first article of this series, I laid out the basic premise for this series: an examination of how Agile has gone from the darling of the application development community to a virtual pariah that nobody wants to be associated with, and an exploration of the very important question of what we should replace ..read more
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Data Governance Gets a New Impetus
TDAN.com
by Myles Suer
2w ago
Data governance has often been met with furrowed brows among CIOs — sometimes seen as the broccoli of the IT dinner plate: undoubtedly good for you, but not always eagerly consumed. CIOs often bore the brunt from organizations that were forced to do top-down data governance. With this said, defensive data governance has been a ..read more
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All in the Data: A Steward in Need Is a Steward in Deed
TDAN.com
by Robert S. Seiner
2w ago
You’ve probably heard the expression, “A friend in need is a friend indeed.” For this column, I am going to play with that expression to make a point. Instead of a friend, I will refer to friends as data stewards. Instead of indeed (meaning certainly), I am going to insert a space in the word ..read more
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The Book Look: Cassandra Data Modeling and Schema Design
TDAN.com
by Steve Hoberman
2w ago
I love writing this column for TDAN. It lets me discuss what I learned from a newly released data management book. When I publish a book through Technics Publications, I see the manuscript mostly through the eyes of a publisher. But when I write this column, I see the manuscript through the eyes of a ..read more
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