In this chapter, we learned how to integrate Microsoft self-service BI tools with Hadoop and Hive to consume data and generate powerful visualizations on the data. With the paradigm shifts in technology, the industry is trending towards an era where Information Technology will be a consumer product. An individual should be able to visualize the insights he needs to an extent from a client side add-in like Power View. These self-service BI tools provide the capability of connecting and talking to a wide variety of data sources seamlessly and create in-memory data models combining the data from these diverse sources for powerful reporting.

Microsoft SQL Server 2012 with Hadoop
By :

Microsoft SQL Server 2012 with Hadoop
By:
Overview of this book
With the explosion of data, the open source Apache Hadoop ecosystem is gaining traction, thanks to its huge ecosystem that has arisen around the core functionalities of its distributed file system (HDFS) and Map Reduce. As of today, being able to have SQL Server talking to Hadoop has become increasingly important because the two are indeed complementary. While petabytes of unstructured data can be stored in Hadoop taking hours to be queried, terabytes of structured data can be stored in SQL Server 2012 and queried in seconds. This leads to the need to transfer and integrate data between Hadoop and SQL Server.
Microsoft SQL Server 2012 with Hadoop is aimed at SQL Server developers. It will quickly show you how to get Hadoop activated on SQL Server 2012 (it ships with this version). Once this is done, the book will focus on how to manage big data with Hadoop and use Hadoop Hive to query the data. It will also cover topics such as using in-memory functions by SQL Server and using tools for BI with big data.
Microsoft SQL Server 2012 with Hadoop focuses on data integration techniques between relational (SQL Server 2012) and non-relational (Hadoop) worlds. It will walk you through different tools for the bi-directional movement of data with practical examples.
You will learn to use open source connectors like SQOOP to import and export data between SQL Server 2012 and Hadoop, and to work with leading in-memory BI tools to create ETL solutions using the Hive ODBC driver for developing your data movement projects. Finally, this book will give you a glimpse of the present day self-service BI tools such as Excel and PowerView to consume Hadoop data and provide powerful insights on the data.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)
Microsoft SQL Server 2012 with Hadoop
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Introduction to Big Data and Hadoop
Using Sqoop – The SQL Server Hadoop Connector
Using the Hive ODBC Driver
Creating a Data Model with SQL Server Analysis Services
Using Microsoft's Self-Service Business Intelligence Tools
Index
Customer Reviews