Never date a tennis player
Love means nothing to them
Not everything has gone to plan this month.
House got flooded 🙁
So now I have to learn how to rent a house, rip down walls and ceilings, re-wire and repaint. While you guys get to learn cool new OBI stuff.
Enjoy this weeks offering….
Blogs of the week
1. Oracle Analytics Cloud 18.1.3 Patch is Available
Boris Dahav links to the‘What’s new’ document
His blog lists changes such as:
- Manage your deliveries in one place
- Update the password for cloud storage
- Install Cube Designer from the Scenarios page
2. “Creating a Property Graph on Oracle Database
Arthur Dayton says, “Oracle Database 12c now includes property graphs, a great feature to analyze relationships in your data, such as finding the most influential people in a social network or discovering patterns of fraud in financial transactions.”
Using the Database Virtual Box Appliance, he runs through a detailed example
3. Relation Theory videos by CJ
Brendan Tierney shares a series of videos, including this one:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cnbbMQaTGP0
4. The Science behind Oracle Data Visualization: Trend
Sarah Craynon Zumbrum begins this series of blog posts by writing:
“This is the start of a new series that I’m excited about diving into. Back in college one of my degrees included a concentration in Quantitative Analysis. I started getting excited about 2-3 years ago when statistics, namely advanced analytics, started becoming a staple in many IT and functional organizations. Data visualization is part of this staple and it’s not just…data art. It’s very much a science that plays well to the artists inside us.”
5. The Science behind Oracle Data Visualization: Clusters
Read the second post in this blog series.
6. Oracle JET Composite Components – Manual for JET Coder
Andrejus Baranovskis links to the demo page. He talks about properties, slots, methods and events.
7. Is Oracle’s Autonomous Database the Beginning of a Major New Industry Trend?
Paul Way shares this video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZBQhXOM3T8A
and asks us to click here to read Oracle’s latest predictions for how industry trends and technological development will transform cloud computing in the next two years.
8. How the DataWarehouse Has Evolved to Enable Better Analytics
9. Oracle CX Cloud Can Help You Prepare for GDPR
Nathan Joynt goes through the aims of GDPR
Why does it matter?
Who is affected?
What changes in terms of ‘consent’?
What are the Data Subject Rights?
How can Oracle Help?
Why use Oracle?
10. Start/Stop Extract/Relicat with REST API/JSON
Bobby Curtis writes, “In this post, you will take a look at how to start a pre-existing extract/replicat by using the RESTful API end points. To find more information on the APIs that are available, please refer to the Oracle docs located here.
11. 2018, the year of the Cloud underdog Oracle
Julian Dontcheff says, “Let us see, why the Cloud underdog Oracle can be the winner of 2018 and beyond. Especially, for databases in the Cloud!”
Sanjeev Chauhan gives the problem “Oracle JET is a client side technology and mostly it uses REST services to fetch data from server. Some of data is used on multiple pages and it does not change very frequently so it’s a good approach to query such data once and then cache it. Next time when you need it refer from cache.” He goes through the solution in this blog.
13. OBIEE cool effect – Mouse hover on table and row highlight
Debashis Paul writes, “My requirement was to add some cool effect on table row hover when you move your mouse across regular table or pivot table view in OBIEE. The advantage of this feature is, it’s cool and not distracting and it will help you to focus one row of important analysis which you can easily distinguish from the other rows.”
Read the full post to find out how to do it!
This week on Twitter
Opal A tweeted #Kscope18
Tim Hall shared Hey DBA, fix it, but don’t touch it!
Gokhan Atil posted Silent Installation of the RDBMS
Paper.li
Stories from http://www.redstk.com
Videos such as:
Why I choose PL/SQL
OBIEE Baseline Validation Tool | Michelle Kolbe