The Open Business Data Lake Standard, Part IV
Blog: Capgemini CTO Blog
In my previous blog posts (Part I, Part II and Part III) about the ‘Open Business Data Lake Conceptual Framework (O-BDL), I introduced its background, concept, characteristics and platform capabilities. In this fourth part I want to compare a Data Lake with other data processing platforms.
Due to its characteristics, a Data Lake is a special type of processing platform. This can best be shown by comparing it with the following existing paltforms:
- Data Federation (ETL)
- Enterprise Service Bus (ESB)
- High-Performance Computing (HPC)
Data Federation (ETL)
An O-BDL is not a data federation processing platform. While data federation tools are able to cross- join data from multiple sources, normally those tools are IT-driven and managed, and they lack the near real-time analytic processing power and agility needed by the users.
Enterprise Service Bus (ESB)
An O-BDL is It is not a new version of the Enterprise Service Bus (ESB). While some ESB vendors have been touting near real-time data analytics (i.e., Complex Event Processing, or CEP) for years, again, those are centrally managed by IT, and most of the deeper analytic needs require data-at-rest analysis as well, not just data-in-motion analytics.
High Performance Computing (HPC)
An O-BDL is not a High-Performance Computing (HPC) platform. An O-BDL relies on different architecture principles and software frameworks. While in HPC environments data is moved to a large “super-computing” facility, in an O-BDL processing is distributed and sent where pieces of data are stored.
While an O-BDL platform is different from the three mentioned, it can be combined perfectly by sitting on top of either of them, abstracting away the problem of performance and working with disparate data sources and targets. Data federation platforms may also be used as a method to create simplifying views of the data stored in an O-BDL for business users. Finally, the same physical infrastructures (clusters) could be used as a HPC environment or an O-BDL.
In the fifth blog in this series I’ll discuss possible O-BDL business scenario’s.
Leave a Comment
You must be logged in to post a comment.