Remove Data Architecture Remove Data Integration Remove Data Lake Remove Digital Transformation
article thumbnail

Modern Data Architecture: Data Warehousing, Data Lakes, and Data Mesh Explained

Data Virtualization

Reading Time: 3 minutes At the heart of every organization lies a data architecture, determining how data is accessed, organized, and used. For this reason, organizations must periodically revisit their data architectures, to ensure that they are aligned with current business goals.

article thumbnail

Are Data Silos Undermining Digital Transformation?

BI-Survey

Thus, alternative data architecture concepts have emerged, such as the data lake and the data lakehouse. Which data architecture is right for the data-driven enterprise remains a subject of ongoing debate. Data black holes: the high cost of supposed flexibility. Data Black Holes.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Strategically Approaching Graph Technologies

Ontotext

Firstly, on the data maturity spectrum, the vast majority of organizations I’ve spoken with are stuck in the information stage. They have massive amounts of data they’re collecting and storing in their relational databases, document stores, data lakes, and data warehouses.

article thumbnail

Data democratization: How data architecture can drive business decisions and AI initiatives

IBM Big Data Hub

Data democratization, much like the term digital transformation five years ago, has become a popular buzzword throughout organizations, from IT departments to the C-suite. It’s often described as a way to simply increase data access, but the transition is about far more than that.