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Chapter 5 Database Processing Jason C. H. Chen, Ph.D. Professor of MIS School of Business Administration Gonzaga University Spokane, WA 99258 [email protected] Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems “We Don’t Have a Way to Track the Data About the Videos.” • Falcon Security stores sequentially numbered digital video files in separated directories for each client. • Tracking down exact footage of when equipment stolen means searching hundreds of video files. • Need database to track video files. • MongoDB for tracking video files? Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Study Questions Q1: What is the purpose of a database? Q2: What is a database? Q3: What is a database management system (DBMS)? Q4: How do database applications make databases more useful? Q5: How are data models used for database development? Q6: How is a data model transformed into a database design? Q7: How can Falcon Security benefit from a database system? Q8: 2026? Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems What is the most important computer resource on the Internet Search Engine (backend)? Database Answer: _________ Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Data, Data, and more Data • Based on a true story • What do we do with data? – Keep records of events, activities, and performance – Find “wisdom/intelligence” from a high volume Big Data) of data (_____ – Expanding our understanding of the environment Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems • You shall learn the following: – 1) Database Concepts and – 2) Conceptual Design (Data Model) Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems QUESTION • Is MS/ACCESS (Oracle, MS/SQL Server or IBM DB2) a database? Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Application #1 Application #2 Application #3 Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems ??? Database containing centralized shared data Database Management System Application #1 Application #2 Application #3 Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems DBMS DBMS manages data resources like an operating system manages hardware resources Database containing centralized shared data Q1: What Is the Purpose of a Database? • As a database user, you play a crucial role (user’s inputs) in developing database applications for your business or organization. • Organize and keep track of things • Keep track of multiple themes • General rule: Single theme - store in a spreadsheet Multiple themes - use a database But, need to NORMALIZE the database – What's a theme? • Ex: Student Grades or Faculty Data Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems 10 A List of Student Grades Presented in a Spreadsheet – Single Theme (Grades Only) Fig 5-1 List of Student Grades, Presented in a Spreadsheet Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Student Data Form from a Database – Multiple Themes Fig 5-2 Student Data Shown in a Form from a Database Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems 12 Q2: What is a database? • These are terms you’ll need to know when working with databases. – A database is an organized collection of logically related data files. (different from the text) – Bytes, characters of data, are grouped into columns which are also called fields. – The fields are grouped into rows which are also called records. – A table is a group of similar rows or records which is also called a file. Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Fig 5-3 Student Table (also called a file) 5-13 Database • Database: (text definition) A self-describing collection of integrated records In databases, bytes are grouped into columns, such as Student Number and Student Name. fields Columns or Columns are also called ______. fields, in turn, are grouped into rows, which are records also called _______. Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems 14 Hierarchy of Data Elements This figure shows the hierarchy of data elements working from the smallest at the bottom to the largest at the top. Fig 5-4 Hierarchy of Data Elements Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems A group of similar rows or records is known as ________. A) a prototype B) a file (or table) C) a field D) an attribute B Answer: ______ Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems 16 Components of a Database: Metadata Describes Structure of Database A database is more than just a group of tables. It includes tables or files plus the relationships among rows in the tables and metadata that describes the database’s structure. Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Fig 5-5 Components of a Database What Are Relationships Among Rows? This diagram shows relationships among pk rows of different tables. The Student Number (foreign key, fk) value in the first row of the top table,1325, relates to the same Student Number (primary key, pk) value in a row in the second table. Both that Student Number value and that pk of 4867 in the second table relate to those in the third. Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems fk pk fk Fig. 5-6: Example of Relationships Among Rows Albert creates a relational database to store employee performance statistics. He stores each employee's data in independent rows and creates a column named "Employee Number" to assign unique numbers to each employee. This column is referred to as a(n) ________. A) primary key B) key attribute C) foreign key D) functionally dependent record A Answer: _____ Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems 19 Relationship Special Terms • Primary Key (pk) A column or group of columns that pk identifies a unique row in a table. Student Number is the (primary) key of the Student table. Given a value of Student Number, you can determine one and only one row in Student. Only one student has the number 1325. Every table must have a (primary) key. Sometimes more than one column is needed to form a unique identifier. In a table called City, for example, the key would consist of combination of columns (City, State). Email_Num is the key of Email Table. pk VisitID is the key of Office_Visit Table. Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems fk pk fk Relationship Special Terms • Foreign keys (fk) fk pk – These are keys of a different (foreign) table than the table in which they reside. – A relational database carries data in the form of tables and uses foreign keys to represent relationships pk • Relational databases Relationships among tables are created by using foreign keys. • Relation Formal name for a table Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems pk fk For each field (attribute), what are the THREE most information should be provided: NAME 1. Field ___________ TYPE (e.g., character or number etc.) 2. Field ___________ SIZE 3. Field ___________ Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems 22 Sample Metadata (in Access) describe data and makes databases Metadata are data that ________ easy to use. Metadata is always a part of a database. The Field Name, Data Type, and Description at the top of this diagram are part of the database’s metadata. The additional field properties at the bottom are also considered metadata. Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Fig 5-7 Sample Metadata (in Access) 5-23 Q3: What Is a Database Management System (DBMS)? • Database developers use the DBMS to create or modify tables, relationships, and other structures in a database. • A DBMS (database management system) is a software program used to create, process, and administer a database. • Popular DBMS products include: • • • • • Oracle from Oracle Corporation (World #1 Database company) DB2 from IBM Access from Microsoft (for personal computers) SQL Server from Microsoft (for large computer systems) MySQL, was an open-source product, now acquired by Oracle • Don’t confuse a DBMS, which is a software program, with a _________, database which is a collection of tables, relationships and metadata. But, they are two different concepts. Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Processing the Database • Five DBMS operations Create Read, Insert, Modify, Delete data • Applications call DBMS in different ways From a form, when the user enters new or changed data, a computer program behind the form calls the DBMS to make the necessary database changes. From an application program, the program calls the DBMS directly to make the change. Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Processing the Database • Structured Query Language - SQL (seequell) – International standard – Used by most popular DBMS INSERT INTO Student ([Student Number], [Student Name], HW1, HW2, MidTerm) VALUES (1000, ‘Franklin, Benjamin’, 90, 95, 100); Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Adding a New Column to a Table (in Access 2013) • Database developers use the DBMS to create and modify tables, relationships, and other structures in the database. • Below, the developer has added a new column called Response?. This new column has data type Yes/No. Fig 5-8 Adding a New Column to a Table (in Access) Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Administering the Database • Set up security system involving user accounts, passwords, permissions, and limits for processing • Limit user permissions in very specific ways • Backing up database data, adding structures to improve performance of database applications, removing unwanted data Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Summary of Database Administration Tasks Fig 5-9 Summary of Database Administration (DBA) Tasks Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Summary of Database Administration Tasks (cont'd) Fig 5-9 Summary of Database Administration (DBA) Tasks Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Browser-based applications ________. A) need to be preinstalled on the users' computers B) run within a corporate network that is protected from the Internet C) eliminate the need to check for data consistency D) are more vulnerable to security threats than are traditional applications D Answer: _____ Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems 31 Q4: How Do Database Applications Make Databases More Useful? Forms Queries __________ View data; insert new, update existing, and delete existing data. Search based upon data values provided by the user. Reports Structured presentation of data using sorting, grouping, Filtering, and other operations. Application programs Provide security, data consistency, and special purpose processing, e.g., handle out-of-stock situations. Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems • Applications make database data more accessible and useful. • Users employ a database application that consists of forms, formatted reports, queries, and application programs. • Database management system (DBMS) processes database tables for applications. Figure 5-10: Components of a Database Application System Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Brenda, the sales manager of a firm, wants to generate a particular report containing sales analyses of the second and third quarter of the year. She should use a ________ to obtain the information that she wants from the database. A) report B) data model C) database administrative function D) Query D Answer: _____ Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Browser Forms, Reports, Queries, and Applications • Database application programs process logic specific to a given business need. For example, a program could track backordered items and hold a customer order until the items are ready to ship. • Application programs enable database processing over the Internet as the figure below shows. Users access the applications programs on a Web server, which in turn accesses a single DBMS and database. Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Fig 5-13 Four Application Programs on a Web Server Computer Example of a Student Report • Data entry forms are used to read, insert, modify, and delete data. • Reports are used to show data in a structured context as the example to the right shows. Fig 5-11 Example of a Student Report Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems What Are Forms, Reports, and Queries? A query form helps the Sample user quickly find query form answers to questions. In used this case, the words to enter “barriers phrase forto entry” were found searchin Baker’s record. Sample query results of query operation Fig 5-12 (a) & (b) Sample Query and Results Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Browser Forms, Reports, Queries, and Applications • Database application programs process logic specific to a given business need. For example, a program could track backordered items and hold a customer order until the items are ready to ship. • Application programs enable database processing over the Internet as the figure below shows. Users access the applications programs on a Web server, which in turn accesses a single DBMS and database. Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Fig 5-13 Four Application Programs on a Web Server Computer Account Creation Browser Form Fig 5-14 Account Creation Browser Form Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Browser Report Fig 5-15 Browser Report Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Access: A DBMS and an Application Development Product • Here’s a comparison of an Enterprise DBMS versus a Personal DBMS. Enterprise DBMS Large organizational and workgroup databases Hundred to thousands of users Many different database applications 24/7 operations Oracle, DB2, SQL Server Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Personal DBMS Smaller, simpler applications Personal or small workgroup applications 1 - 100 users Microsoft Access is both a DBMS and application development product as this figure depicts. Fig 5-Extra Personal Database System PART II Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Q5: How to Design a Database? • Questions to ask (yourself or clients): – What tables to create? (e.g., GU database) – What attributes (fields) should be in each table? – How those tables (and how many) are related to each other? • Data model: is a conceptual representation of data classes (data files) and their relationships. • Relational database: data are organized as twodimensional tables called relations, which are linked together by sharing the same field. Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Q5: How Are Data Models Used for Database Development? A data model is similar to blueprints for a house. It’s a logical representation of database data that describes data and their relationships ______ ____________. Fig 5-17 Database Development Process Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems ________ is the process of converting a data model into tables, relationships, and data constraints. A) Database design B) Database querying C) Data mining D) Database aggregation A Answer: ______ Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems 45 Steps of Database Development … User view-1 User view-2 User view-3 … User view-N … User interview & Integrated Model Conceptual Schema (Model) Logical Model (ERD or E/ERD) Data Model Implementation (w/Physical or Internal Model) Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems 46 How are data models used for database development? • Conceptual Design – The process of preparing an abstract model of the database from business perspective, which describes the information needs of end users of the database – Entity-relationship approach => E-R Diagram (ERD) – Relational DBMS: • Transform ERD to tables • Normalization process (you will learn it later) • Physical Design – Describe how data would be physically stored in the data storage – Depends on the DBMS Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems How are data models used for database development? • An entity-relationship (ER) data model helps developers define things (entities) that will be stored in the database as they are building a data model. • It also defines relationships among those entities. • Entities are things users want to track. It can be a physical object (inventory items) or a logical transaction (sales order). The names are always singular. • Each entity has attributes that describe its characteristics. The entity “Order” has attributes like “OrderNumber” and “OrderDate”. • An identifier (pk) is an attribute whose value is associated with one and only one entity instance. “OrderNumber” is the identifier for the “Order” entity because there should only be one number for each order. (see next slide) Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Components of the Entity-Relationship Data Model Entities / Table/ Files • Something users want to track • Order, customer, salesperson, item, volunteer, donation Attributes / Fields • Describe characteristics of an entity • OrderNumber, CustomerNumber, VolunteerName, PhoneNumber Identifier / Primary Key (PK) Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems • Uniquely identifies one entity instance from other instances • Student_ID_Number 49 ________ is the process of converting a data model into tables, relationships, and data constraints. A) Database design B) Database querying C) Data mining D) Database aggregation A Answer: ______ Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems 50 A Data Model on Customer and Order Segment of an Enterprise Data Model CUSTOMER ORDER M ORDER? Q1. One CUSTOMER normally places ___ 1 CUSTOMER? Q2. One ORDER normally is placed by __ How about the relationship between ORDER and PRODUCT? (see next slide) Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems ORDER ORDER_NUMBER (pk) Customer_ID Order_Date Q3. One PRODUCT normally is contained in M __ ORDER? Q4. One ORDER normally contains __ PRODUCT? M Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems ORDER ORDER_NUMBER (pk) Customer_ID Order_Date Q3. One PRODUCT normally is contained in M __ ORDER? Q4. One ORDER normally contains __ PRODUCT? M Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Comparison of enterprise and project level data models (a) Segment of an Enterprise Data Model Q: what are two major differences between (a) & (b)? (b) Segment of a Project-Level Data Model Product_ID Order_ID Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems How are data models used for database development? • User involvement is critical for database development for these reasons: – A database’s design depends on how users view their business environment and how they do their jobs. – Database developers do not and cannot know what to include because they don’t work with the data everyday. They must rely on users to tell them what data are important and how they’re used.. Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems 5-55 What Is the Entity-Relationship Data Model? • Entity-relationship (E-R) data model A tool for constructing data models Developers use it to describe the content of a data model by defining entities that will be stored in database and relationships among those entities Unified Modeling Language (UML), less popular, tool for data modeling Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Entities • Some thing that the users want to track • Examples of entities: Order, Customer, Salesperson, and Item. Some entities represent a physical object, such as Item or Salesperson; others represent a logical construct or transaction, such as Order or Contract. Entity names are always singular. • Attributes Describe characteristics of an entity. Examples: order attributes are OrderNumber, OrderDate, SubTotal, Tax, Total, and so forth. • Identifier An attribute (or group of attributes) whose value is associated with one and only one entity instance. Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Student Data Model Entities Student, Department, Advisor, Email, and Office_Visit are the entity names in this model. The entity identifiers are StudentNumber, DeptName, and AdvisorName. Not all entities require an identifier. pk pk pk? pk Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems pk? Fig 5-18 Student Data Model Entities Example of Department, Adviser, and Student Entities and Relationships (cont'd) • Relationships join one entity to another entity – One-to-one – 1:1 – One-to-many – 1:N – Many-to-many – N:M • This diagram shows that each Department Entity can have multiple Adviser Entities in a oneto-many relationship. Adviser Entities can have a many-to-many relationship with Student Entities. Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems M:N or N:M 1:N School of Business? Fig 5-19 Example of Department, Adviser, and Student Entities and Relationships 59 Basic E-R notation Entity symbols A special entity that is also a relationship Attribute symbols Relationship symbols Relationship degrees specify number of entity types involved Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Relationship cardinalities specify how many of each entity type is allowed Sample of Relationships (Adviser and Student) -Version 1 Crow’s Feet 1:N One department may have many advisers, but an adviser may be in only one department N:M An Adviser may have many students, and one student may have many advisers e.g., Students have multiple majors from multiple schools Fig 5-20 Sample of Relationships Version 1 Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems 61 Sample of Relationships (Adviser and Student) - Version 2 “Crow’s Foot” N:M A department has many advisors, and an advisor may advise for more than one department 1:N A student has only one advisor, but an adviser may advise many students Fig 5-21 Sample of Relationships Version 1 Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems 62 Crow’s-Foot Diagram Version Maximum cardinality represents the maximum number of entities that can be involved in a relationship. Minimum cardinality represents the minimum number of entities that can be involved in a relationship. The vertical bar below indicates that at least one (mandatory) entity is required between Department and Adviser and between Adviser and Student. The oval below indicates that an entity is optional and doesn’t require a relationship. mandatory optional Fig 5-22 Sample Relationships Showing Maximum/Minimum Cardinality Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems 5-63 A student management system allows students to have multiple majors, and advisers are assigned to handle multiple students and courses. This is an example of a(n) ________ relationship. A) 1:N B) 1:1 C) N:M D) M:1 C Answer: _____ Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Q6: How Is a Data Model Transformed into a Database Design? Normalization • _____________ • Converting poorly structured tables into two or more well-structured tables • Goal • Construct tables with data about a single theme or entity • Purpose • To minimize data integrity problems Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Data Integrity Problems • Data integrity problems • Produce incorrect and inconsistent information • Users lose confidence in information • System gets a poor reputation • Can only occur if data are duplicated (or un-normalized) Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Poorly Designed Employee Table Causes Data Integrity Problem Converting a poorly structured table into two or more well-structured tables is called normalization (Normalization The table below is poorly designed because it includes the DeptName (i.e., two themes) as part of the Employee record, making it difficult to update. It also creates data integrity problems because the DeptName is not consistent throughout the table after the data were updated. Question: What happen if “Smith” is laid off and the record is deleted? Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Fig 5-23: Poorly Designed Employee Table Steps of Database Development User view-1 User view-2 User view-3 … Conceptual Schema (Model) Logical Model (ERD or E/ERD) ??? Implementation (w/Physical Model) Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems … … User view-N Steps of Database Development User view-1 User view-2 User view-3 … … User view-N … Conceptual Schema (Model) Logical Model (ERD or E/ERD) Normalization _____________ (up to 3NF) _____________ Implementation (w/Physical Model) Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems (more tables created) Data Integrity Problems • In the right figure, some rows show Dept. 100 is “Accounting and Finance” and others show Dept. 100 is “Accounting.” Which one is correct? • A table with data integrity problems will produce incorrect results and inconsistent information. • Data integrity problems happen when data are duplicated. • Users will lose confidence in the information, and system will develop a poor reputation. Information systems with poor reputations become serious burdens to the organizations that use them. Fig 5-23 A Poorly Designed Employee Table Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Normalizing for Data Integrity • Normalized tables eliminate (at least minimize) data duplication, but they can be slower to process. • General goal of normalization is to construct tables such that every table has a single topic or theme. ______ Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems 71 Normalizing for Data Integrity • Normalizing the tables by splitting the Department data into a separate table, as shown below, allows each table to describe a single topic or theme. The tables have been transformed into a normal form. • By eliminating the duplicate data, you eliminate (solve) data integrity problems. That’s called normalizing for data integrity.. Now, the department name only needs to be updated in one place in the normalized tables Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Fig 5-24: Two Normalized Tables Question: What happen if “Smith” is laid off or resigned and the record is deleted now? Why it is in a better status? 72 Two Normalized Tables A table is with two themes (before Normalization) After Normalization Single Theme in Each Table Two tables are produced (each table is with single theme) after Normalization. Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Two Normalized Tables A table is with two themes (before Normalization) After Normalization Single Theme in Each Table (two tables total) Two tables are produced (each table is with single theme) after Normalization. Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems The process of normalization constructs tables such that every table has a ________. A) one-to-one relationship between entities B) single theme C) foreign key D) specialized graphical query B Answer: _____ Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Summary of Normalization: Representing Relationships • This chart shows the necessary steps to transform a data model into a relational database design. (1) (pk) You will learn more (2) (HOW?) in bmis441 if (3) you are interested in MIS concentration (for data integrity) (fk) Fig 5-25 Transforming a Data Model into a Database Design Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems 76 Summary of Normalization • Database practitioners classify tables into various normal forms according to the kinds of problems they have. • Transforming a table into a normal form to remove duplicated data and other problems is called normalizing the table. • Normalization is just one criterion for evaluating database designs. Normalized designs can be slower to process, database designers sometimes choose to accept non-normalized tables. The best design depends on the users’ processing requirements. Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Steps for Transforming Data Model Into a Database Design 1. Construct Adviser table and Student tables with key fields 2. Represent relationships by adding foreign keys (fk) 3. Create new table for N:M relationships (only if the relationship is N:M) Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Representing 1:N Relationships What is the difference between (b) & (c)? pk pk pk pk Fig 5-26 Representing a 1:N Relationship Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems fk Transforming Data Model Into a Database Design – Step 1: Construct Tables with Key fields ‘pk’ pk The figure on the left represents the relationship (1:N) between tables. The figure on the right shows a normalized table for each entity. pk pk pk 1. However, we should know that AdvserName is not a good pk as it may not be “unique”. 2. What should be a good one? Ans: Adviser_ID Figure 5-26 (a&b) Representing a 1:N Relationship Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Transforming Data Model Into a Database Design Step 2: Adding fk pk pk fk From Figure 5-26 (c) Representing a 1:N Relationship Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Fig 5-26: Representing a 1:N Relationship (in normalized form) pk Step 1. pk Transforming a Data Model into a Database Design: 1:N Relationship pk pk fk Step 2. Represent relationships by adding foreign keys (fk) Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems 82 82 Example 2 M to N Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems How to solve the M:N problem? Adviser pk AdviserName Email Student pk StudentNumber StudentName MidTerm cpk (composite key) Adviser AdviserName Email Student Adviser_Student AdviserName StudentNumber StudentNumber StudentName MidTerm (Intersection/Associative Entity) What is the pk in the new Table (Adviser_Student)? Ans: AdviserName and StudentNumber together (cpk – composite key) General Rule: One M:N relationship will be broken down into Two 1:M relationships. Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems How to solve the M:N problem? [1] pk pk cpk (composite key) [2] fk fk pk Finally, three tables are produced for the normalized form. Therefore, two tables originally in the data model and three tables are produced after the normalization. Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems [3] Transforming Data Model Into a Database Design Step 3: Create new table for N:M relationships The previous relationship is 1:N, therefore, it does not need to create a new table pk pk Since it is not in Third Normal Form (3NF). How? Figure 5-27 (a&b) Incorrect Representation of N:M Relationship Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Representing an N:M Relationship: Strategy for Foreign Keys pk pk cpk (composite key) One M:N relationship will be broken down into _____ Two 1:M relationships. General Rule: ____ Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems 87 pk pk fk Steps 1&2. pk fk Step 3. fk Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Fig 5-27: Representing an N:M Relationship 88 pk pk fk pk Steps 1&2. pk cpk fk Step 3. fk Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Fig 5-27: Representing an N:M Relationship 89 How to solve the M:N problem? The Final Status pk pk cpk (composite key) fk What is the pk for Adviser_Student_Int ersection table? Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems fk Users’ Role in the Development of Databases • Final judges. • Thorough review of data model. • Entities must contain all the data users need to do their jobs. • Must accurately reflect their view of the business. • Take it seriously. • Devote time. Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Q7: How Can Falcon Security Benefit from a Database System? • Find videos by querying their characteristics. • “Which videos do we have of the Beresford Building in October 2014, shot from 3,000 feet or less?” • Choices 1. Store videos on a file server and keep metadata about each video in a relational database to query with SQL. 2. Use NoSQL MongoDB. Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Q8: 2026? • Volume of database continues to grow. • Cheap, unlimited storage, greater processing speeds do in relational databases. • Security becomes more important. • Many NoSQL, NewSQL, and in-memory databases exist in commerce. • Keep abreast of developments. • Watch from investor’s perspective. • New opportunities and career paths will develop around these new DBMS products. • Separate yourself from the competition when it comes to job interviews. Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems From Data to Knowledge: How Can Organization Gain Competitive Advantage? (Survive and Prosper in the Digital Economy) Data process Information Quality Information Available -As a product NOT byproduct Decision Making Accessible context, experience D. B. Organizational Knowledge D.B.: Structured: R-DBMS Unstructured: Document Mgt. Systems informate Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems Sharable Collaborative Reusable K.B D.W automate Useable innovate -As core intellectual capital NOT merely a few smart employers External customers CRM Accounting Finance Operations Manufacturing Q8: 2026? • Volume of database continues to grow. • Cheap, unlimited storage, greater processing speeds do in relational databases. • Security becomes more important. • Many NoSQL, NewSQL, and in-memory databases exist in commerce. • Keep abreast of developments. • Watch from investor’s perspective. • New opportunities and career paths will develop around these new DBMS products. • Separate yourself from the competition when it comes to job interviews. Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems • END of CHAPTER 5 Dr. Chen, Management Information Systems