Book Image

Cloud Scale Analytics with Azure Data Services

By : Patrik Borosch
Book Image

Cloud Scale Analytics with Azure Data Services

By: Patrik Borosch

Overview of this book

Azure Data Lake, the modern data warehouse architecture, and related data services on Azure enable organizations to build their own customized analytical platform to fit any analytical requirements in terms of volume, speed, and quality. This book is your guide to learning all the features and capabilities of Azure data services for storing, processing, and analyzing data (structured, unstructured, and semi-structured) of any size. You will explore key techniques for ingesting and storing data and perform batch, streaming, and interactive analytics. The book also shows you how to overcome various challenges and complexities relating to productivity and scaling. Next, you will be able to develop and run massive data workloads to perform different actions. Using a cloud-based big data-modern data warehouse-analytics setup, you will also be able to build secure, scalable data estates for enterprises. Finally, you will not only learn how to develop a data warehouse but also understand how to create enterprise-grade security and auditing big data programs. By the end of this Azure book, you will have learned how to develop a powerful and efficient analytical platform to meet enterprise needs.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
1
Section 1: Data Warehousing and Considerations Regarding Cloud Computing
4
Section 2: The Storage Layer
7
Section 3: Cloud-Scale Data Integration and Data Transformation
14
Section 4: Data Presentation, Dashboarding, and Distribution

Answering the question

Given everything we have learned, is the Data Warehouse dead because of the availability of Data Lakes?

Not at all! What if you could combine the two philosophies and benefit from the advantages of both? The terms that are used for this new approach, which is powered by the availability, scalability, and elasticity offered by the cloud vendors, are "the Data Lakehouse" and, the term that I like more, the Modern Data Warehouse.

We will explore this concept in more detail in Chapter 2, Connecting Requirements and Technology.