Building Business Intelligence Applications with .NET (Charles River Media Programming)

Read [Rob Ericsson Book] ! Building Business Intelligence Applications with .NET (Charles River Media Programming) Online * PDF eBook or Kindle ePUB free. Building Business Intelligence Applications with .NET (Charles River Media Programming) ACD said Looking for help on Programming DTS with .NET?. I was looking guidance on how to program DTS with .NET; sadly, this book misses the mark with Looking for help on Programming DTS with .NET? according to ACD. I was looking guidance on how to program DTS with .NET; sadly, this book misses the mark with 2 of Looking for help on Programming DTS with .NET? I was looking guidance on how to program DTS with .NET; sadly, this book misses the mark with 2 of 3 crucuial learning steps poorly code

Building Business Intelligence Applications with .NET (Charles River Media Programming)

Author :
Rating : 4.57 (562 Votes)
Asin : 1584502711
Format Type : paperback
Number of Pages : 404 Pages
Publish Date : 2014-08-24
Language : English

DESCRIPTION:

He holds an MS in the Management of Information Technology from the University of Virginia. . About the Author Rob Ericsson (Roanoke,VA) is a consultant and program manager at Meridium Inc.He has written about business intelligence for numerous publications, including .NET ASP Today and SQL Server Professional and is the author of Building Business Intelligence Applications with .NET

ACD said Looking for help on Programming DTS with .NET?. I was looking guidance on how to program DTS with .NET; sadly, this book misses the mark with "Looking for help on Programming DTS with .NET?" according to ACD. I was looking guidance on how to program DTS with .NET; sadly, this book misses the mark with 2 of Looking for help on Programming DTS with .NET? I was looking guidance on how to program DTS with .NET; sadly, this book misses the mark with 2 of 3 crucuial learning steps poorly coded (PackageSave, particulary). The examples do not work, and errata does not appear to be available on-line. Visit MSDN and other helpful sites on DTS & .NET (don't worry, there are a few good ones).Although the chapter on DTS is helpful in setting up your libraries, etc., you don't get stars for half-finished, or almost-working code. crucuial learning steps poorly coded (PackageSave, particulary). The examples do not work, and errata does not appear to be available on-line. Visit MSDN and other helpful sites on DTS & .NET (don't worry, there are a few good ones).Although the chapter on DTS is helpful in setting up your libraries, etc., you don't get stars for half-finished, or almost-working code. of Looking for help on Programming DTS with .NET? I was looking guidance on how to program DTS with .NET; sadly, this book misses the mark with 2 of 3 crucuial learning steps poorly coded (PackageSave, particulary). The examples do not work, and errata does not appear to be available on-line. Visit MSDN and other helpful sites on DTS & .NET (don't worry, there are a few good ones).Although the chapter on DTS is helpful in setting up your libraries, etc., you don't get stars for half-finished, or almost-working code. crucuial learning steps poorly coded (PackageSave, particulary). The examples do not work, and errata does not appear to be available on-line. Visit MSDN and other helpful sites on DTS & .NET (don't worry, there are a few good ones).Although the chapter on DTS is helpful in setting up your libraries, etc., you don't get stars for half-finished, or almost-working code. A Good Way to Get Started Businesses today are flooded with data. Everything, every transaction, every cash register produces floods of data. The problem is that the business manager needs to have information not just data. And this information needs to come from data that is scattered literally all over the world. It resides in various types of computer systems with various formats, various operating systems, and perhaps even in various languages.Microsoft has approached this complex problem with their .NET concept. This book is on using the .NET concepts to bring this information together in a useable manner so that decisions can be made with some confidence . Covers the most trivial basics This book is a major dissappointment. It covers only the most basic BI and .NET information. Information that is easily attainable from Microsoft documentation. Save your money. The author covers basics such as "How to create a cube" and "How to add a COM object to a .NET project". He then moves on to 'advanced' topics such as "How to open a connection" and then lists the Object model (as if I don't already have that information). He doesn't even discuss the loading of datagrids or working with charting controls. Much less anything about "drill to detail" functionality.

Rob Ericsson (Roanoke,VA) is a consultant and program manager at Meridium Inc.He has written about business intelligence for numerous publications, including .NET ASP Today and SQL Server Professional and is the author of Building Business Intelligence Applications with .NET. . He holds an MS in the Manageme

Data is captured in almost every consumer activity, and most of this data ends up in some kind of transaction processing system, but it only has value if it can be used to make better decisions. By using the compelling technologies offered by .NET (such as Web Services, Smart Clients, and XML for Analysis) developers can construct BI applications that address their critical data, analytical, and flexiblity issues.. Building Business Intelligence Applications with .NET provides a practical guide to creating these tools, by teaching corporate software developers how to use .NET technologies to build applications for data mining, statistical analysis, or

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