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Wednesday, May 23, 2012

The Rise of the Connector - Part 2

Connectors are the heart and soul of Federated Search (FS) engines and with the rise in importance of FS in today’s fast paced, Big Data, analyze everything world, they are crucial to smooth and efficient data virtualization and flow. MuseGlobal has been building Connectors, and the architecture to use them (the Muse/ICE platform) and maintain and support them (the Muse Source Factory) for over 12 years. The people who design and build Connectors must be both computer savvy, and also have a deep understanding of data and information and its myriad formulations.

This second in the series of posts looks at the problems arising as data is needed from outside the enterprise, and the complexities of access and extraction that result. Not surprisingly, as a leading FS platform Muse and its ecosystem are in the forefront of providing solutions to data complexity problems in the modern world. (The first post considers the growing importance of being able to access data from inside an organization.)



Part 2         A broader perspective

All of this speaks to the volume and velocity (of change) of the data – two of the trio of defining “v”s of Big Data. The third v is variety and this is now encompassing much more than the internal data silos of the enterprise. Increasingly decisions need to take account of the outside world: competitors, news media, commentators and analysts, customer feedback, social postings and tweets.

Most of these sources are also fleeting. Customer records will last for years, a tweet is gone in 9 days. Even product reviews are only relevant until the next version of the product is released. And there are another couple of additional hurdles to jump to get this valuable “perspective” data.

This data lives outside the enterprise. Some other person or organization has control of it. And that means the old ETL trick of grabbing everything is likely to be severely frowned on – especially if it is tried every night. Commercial considerations mean that, if this data is valuable to you, then it is valuable to others, and the owners will not let you have it all for free. This means the strategy of asking for exactly what is needed is the way to go. It takes less time everywhere, will cost less in processing and transmission, will cost less in data license fees, and will not alienate valuable data sources. So “sipping gently” is the way to go.

Yes, in the paragraph above you saw “fees” mentioned. Once the commercial details have been sorted out, there is still the tricky technical matter of getting access through the paywall to the data you need, and are entitled to. Some services will provide some of the data you want for free, but most will require authenticated access even of there is no charge Those who are selling their data will certainly want to know that you are a legitimate user, and be sure you are getting what you have paid for – and no more.

For both of these considerations Federated Search engines, especially in their harvesting mode allow all the “virtual data” to become yours when you need it. Access control is one of the mainstays of the better FS systems to ensure just this fair use of data. And gentle sipping for just the required data is their whole purpose. Again a tool for the task arises. MuseGlobal runs a Content Partner Program to ensure we deal fairly and accurately with the data we retrieve from the thousands of sources we can connect to, both technically and as a matter of respecting the contractual relationship between the provider and consumer. We are the Switzerland of data access – totally neutral and scrupulously fair, and secure.


Complexity everywhere

So now you are accessing internal and external data for your BI reports. Unfortunately, while you might have a nice clean Master Data Managed situation in your company, it is not the one the external data sources are using (not unless you are Walmart or GM and can impose your will on your suppliers, that is). And this means the analysis will be pretty bad unless you can get internal product codes to match to popular names in posts and tweets. There is a world of semantic hurt lurking here.

You need tools. Fortunately the Federated Search engine you are now employing to gather your virtual data is able to help. Data re-formatting, field level semantics, content level semantics, controlled ontologies, normalized forms, content merging and de-merging, enumeration, duplicate control, all these are tools within the FS system. They are powerful tools and they are very precise, and they come with a health warning: “This Connector is for use with this source only”.

Connectors are built, and maintained, very specifically for a single Target. They know all about that target, from its communications protocol to the abbreviations it uses in the data. Thus they produce the deepest possible data extraction possible. And can deliver that data in a consistent format suited to the Data Model and systems which are going to use it. They are data transformers extraordinaire. This contrasts with crawlers at the other end of the scale where the aim is to get a simple sufficiency of data to handle keyword indexing.

This precision means that they are in need of “tuning” whenever their target changes in some way. Major changes like access protocols are rare, but a website changing the layout of its reviews is common and frequent. Complexity like this is handled by a “tools infrastructure” for the FS engine whereby testing, modification, testing again, and deployment are highly automated actions, reducing the human input to the problem solving, not the rote.

And now another wrinkle: some of the data needed for the analysis is not contained in the records you retrieve, and the only way to determine this is to examine those records and then go and get it. As a simple example think of a tweet which references a blog post. The tweet has the link, but not the content of the post. For a meaningful analysis, you need that original post. Fortunately the better FS systems have a feature called enhancement which allows for just this possibility. It allows the system to build completely virtual records from the content of others. Think more deeply of a hospital patient record. This will have administrative details, but no financial data, no medical history notes, not results of blood tests, no scans, no operation reports, no list of past and current drugs. And even if you gather all this, the list of drugs will not include their interactions, so there could be more digging to do. A properly configured and authenticated FS system will deliver this complete record.

Analysis these days is more than just a list of what people said about your product. It involves demographics and sentiment, and timeliness and location. All these can come from a good analysis engine – if it has the raw data to work from. Enhanced virtual records from a wide spectrum of sources will give a lot, but making the connections may not be that simple. We mentioned above “official” and popular product names and the need to reconcile them. Think for a moment of drug names. Fortunately a good FS system can do a lot of this thinking for you, and your analytics engine. Extraction of entities by mining the unstructured text of reviews and posts and news article and scientific literature allows them to be tagged so that the analysis recognizes the sameness of them. Good FS engines will allow this to a degree. Better ones will also allow that a specialist text miner can be incorporated in the workflow and give each record its special treatment – all invisibly to the BI system asking for the data.


Partnership at last

There is a lot of data out there, and a great deal of it is probably very useful to you and your company. Using the correct analysis engines and Federated Search “feeding” tools enables that data to be brought together in a flexible, efficient, and accurate manner to give the information needed for informed decisions.

Federated Search is still a very powerful and effective way to search for humans, but it has grown up to be one of the most effective tools for systems integration, the breaking down of corporate silos of data, and the incorporation of data from the whole Internet into a unified, useable data set to create real knowledge.

Muse is one of those tools which can supply the complete range from end user fed search portals, to embedded data virtualization, and we intend to keep up with the next turn of data events.

Monday, May 14, 2012

The Rise of the Connector - Part 1



Connectors are the heart and soul of Federated Search (FS) engines and with the rise in importance of FS in today’s fast paced, Big Data, analyze everything world, they are crucial to smooth and efficient data virtualization and flow. MuseGlobal has been building Connectors, and the architecture to use them (the Muse/ICE platform) and maintain and support them (the Muse Source Factory) for over 12 years. The people who design and build Connectors must have rich technical expertise, and also have a deep understanding of data and information and its myriad formulations.

This series of posts will look at the problems arising as data grew in volume, spread across systems, moved outside the enterprise, and became all important for the business intelligence which informs current corporate decisions. Not surprisingly, as a leading FS platform Muse and its ecosystem are in the forefront of providing solutions to data problems in the modern world.

This first post considers the growing importance of being able to access data from inside an organization. (The second post looks at the problems arising as data is needed from outside the enterprise, and the complexities of access and extraction that result.)

Part 1         Wanted: data from over there, over here


As the world of Big Data grows daily and the importance of unstructured data becomes more evident to information workers and managers everywhere, methods of accessing that data become critical to success.

Typically in an enterprise the majority of their data is held in relational DBMS’s which are attached to the transaction systems that generate and use it. These include HR, Bill of Materials, Asset Management systems and the like.  However for managers to make strategic decisions on even this data is difficult, they need to see it all at once. The analysis managers need is performed by a Business Intelligence (BI) system, and it works on data held in its own (OLAP) database, which is specially structured to give quick answers to pre-formulated questions.

And here is the first problem: transaction systems with lots of data, and an analysis system with an empty database.  The solution: set up and run a batch process for each working database that takes a snapshot of its data and transforms and loads it into the OLAP database. This is ETL (Extract, Transform, Load) and is where most big company systems are at the moment. The transaction systems have no method of exporting the data, and the analysis engine just works from what it has. This three part solution works and it works well, but it has some problems.

Running a snapshot ETL on each working system at “midnight” obviously takes time, and can be nearly a day old before the process starts. This lack of “freshness” of the data didn’t matter too much 5 or even 2 years ago. It took so long to change systems as a result of the analysis that data a day or so old was not on the critical path. But today’s systems can adapt much more rapidly, and business decisions need to be based on hourly or even by-the-minute data. (Of course, if you are in the stock and financial markets then your timescale is down to micro-seconds, and you have specialist systems tailored for that level of response.)  So first we need to improve on our timing.

In order to do that we need to move from a just-in-case operation to a just-in-time one. Rather than collect all the data once a day, we need to be able to gather it exactly when we need it. Of course gathering it overnight as historic data is still important and makes the whole process work more smoothly and quickly as the just-in-time data is now only a few hour’s worth and so can be processed that much quicker to get it into the BI system. Now we have a two-legged approach: batch bulk and focused immediate updates. Sounds good, but the ETL software for the batch work will not handle the real time nature of the j-i-t data requests.

For a start the ETL process grabs everything in the transaction system database – all customers, all products, all markets. But a manager is generally going to ask for a report on a specific customer or product. It would be endlessly wasteful to grab all that “fresh” data for all customers, when only data for one is needed. So the j-i-t process has to be able to query the transaction system, rather than sweep up everything. It is also almost certain that the required report will need data from more than one transaction system, but probably not all of them. ETL is not set up to do this; it needs a system capable of directing queries at designated systems and transforming those results. And, finally, the extracted data may well need to be in a different format. After all now we are loading the data directly into the Business Intelligence analysis engine for this report (for speed), and not importing it to the OLAP database.  This means that the structure and semantics are all different.

Increasingly the tools of choice for these j-i-t operations are Federated Search (FS) systems such as MuseGlobal’s Muse platform. They can search a designated set of sources (transaction systems), run a specific query against them, and then re-format the results and send them directly to the analysis engine. Initial examples of FS systems are user driven, but for this data integration purpose, the more sophisticated FS systems are able to accept command strings and messages in a wide variety of protocols, formats and languages and act on them, thus allowing the FS system to act a s a middleman getting the data the BI engine needs exactly when it needs it. Muse, for example, through its use of “Bridges” can accept command inputs in over a dozen distinctly different protocols, and can query all the major enterprise management suites in a native or standards-based protocol.


Should we move?


The need for speed of analysis and the volume of data involved grows every day it seems. It takes time to extract all that data and to build a big OLAP database just in case we want it.  What’s more, building, and changing the structure to adapt to changing analysis needs takes time – a lot of it.

So modern BI systems have moved to holding their database in memory, rather than on disk, just so everything is that much faster. Modern analysis engines, many based on the Apache project’s Hadoop engine, can handle a lot of data in a big computer, and do it rapidly. Both Oracle (Exalytics) and SAP (Hana) have introduced these combined in-memory database plus analytics engine, and others are coming. (See here for an InformationWeek take on the war of words surrounding them.) These engines can be rapidly configured (often in real time, through a dashboard) to give a new analysis report – as long as they have the data!

Moving all that data from the transaction system takes time, so the current mode is to leave it there and rely on real-time acquisition of what is needed. This is of course much less disruptive, fresher, and much more focused on the analysis at hand. This is not to say that historical data is not important; it is, and it is used by these engines, but the emphasis is more and more on that last bar on the graph.

So, again we need a delivery engine to get our data for us from all the corporate data silos, get it when it is needed, and then deliver it to the maw of the BI analytics engine. Once again the systems integration, dynamic configuration and deep extraction technologies of a Federated Search engine come to the rescue. Muse supports the real time capabilities, parallel processing architecture, session management, and protocol flexibility to deliver large quantities of data when asked for, or on a continuing “feed” basis.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Federated Search & Big Data gets bigger

The world of independent Federated Search is diminishing; last week IBM announced that they will be acquiring Vivisimo.[1]  There are a number of interesting aspects to this, and the analysts have covered some of them [2],[3], but some particular quotes from IBM itself and the analysts piqued my interest:

“The combination of IBM's big data analytics capabilities with Vivisimo software will further IBM's efforts to automate the flow of data into business analytics applications …” [IBM]
IBM also intends to use Vivisimo's technology to help fuel the learning process for their Watson
applications.” [IDC]
Overall, this is a very smart move for IBM, and it indicates that unstructured information is going to play an increasingly large role in the Big Data story…” [IDC]

All this shows the handling of structured and unstructured information growing in importance.

What does IBM want Vivisimo for? It seems to all stem round Big Data and the analytics that it can produce to enable better corporate decisions.  Of course, there’s also the lovely teaser of a better performing Watson! Both Watson and Analytics massage vast amounts of data and information to draw conclusions, assign values, and create relationships. But, like all such endeavors, the quality of the result depends critically on the quality of the incoming data. GIGO says it all!

Big Data analytics work very well with structured data, where the “meaning” of each number or term is exactly known and can be algorithmically combined with its peers, parents, siblings, and opposites to give a visualization of the state of play at the moment or over time. Gathering such data is a tedious process (hooray for computers!), but is not intrinsically difficult. All that needs to happen is to set up a mapping from each data Source to the master and let it run. The mappings are precise and the process effective, but the volumes are vast and the time-to-repeat rather slow for today’s fast paced world.

However, now add the fact that not everything you want to know is held in those nice regular relational database tables, and the picture looks far less rosy. Product reviews are unstructured, press releases are vague, social comments are fleeting, and technical and legal documents tend to be obtuse. But all these are vital if you want to make a really informed decision. So bring in Federated Search to the rescue.

Federated Search is a real time activity. It is focused on just what data or information is needed now. And it provides quality data. It is directed to just those Sources needed for “this report”, and it analyzes them in terms of known semantics so that the reviews, blogs, etc. mesh with the numerical analytics, and then provide the essential “external view” of the situation. And this is done right now, in real time. For the knowledge based systems (like Watson) the FS Sources provide in-depth data pertinent to the current problem. And if the Sources don’t have it, FS goes and finds it, thus allowing  Watson (as an example)  to add it to its knowledge base, and provide a more informed opinion.

So that is why IBM is adding Federated Search to its armory. What are the issues? In a word (or two): coverage and completeness.

All the Big Data systems use standardized access to the massive databases of the corporation’s transaction and repository systems. Most of these understand SQL or some other standard access language, and the customization is a matter of reading a schema mapping table. That mapping table is the same for every SharePoint or Exchange system (or similar), so once created, it is easily deployed. These types of standardized accesses are often referred to as “Indexing Connectors” because they extract enough data to enable the content to be indexed and searched. (For more on this see a future post on the deep differences between Connectors and Crawlers.)

Now, move to the world of web data and the complexity and difficulty escalates enormously.  The number of formats and access methods multiplies almost to the point of one-to-one for each Source. As an example look at the two press releases for this acquisition: IBM’s is a press release, with an initial dateline, and no tags, Vivisimo’s [4] is a blog post with tags and an author. The same Connector will not make sense of both at the level of detail needed for a decision making analysis.

Add in the velocity of the data in the social media (“velocity”, as you will recall, is one of the 3 “v”s that define Big Data – Volume, Variety, Velocity) and the relatively slow to aggregate times of conventional databases become a problem. Timing is an issue because of volume, but also because applications have to analyze input data from users and other sources, store it in their transactional database, and then the ETL function has to extract from that database and move the data to the analytics database or storage area. These are two stages, both relatively slow, that must be batched together.

So, once moving from structured data to unstructured data, and from the sheltered waters of the corporation to the rough seas of the Web, a very different set of techniques is needed. And that is where Federated Search (FS) comes in.   This is the truly hard, difficult part, and it’s where MuseGlobal shines.   But first, some more information on what FS is, and what it needs to do.

FS is immediate, which involves many synchronization and “freshness” issues, but essentially solves the “velocity” problem by obtaining data as it is needed. That is because FS is a “on demand” service. It is brought into play just-in-time to get the data when needed, not in batch mode to store it away just-in-case. Since it is used when needed it needs to be able to target the Sources of interest right now. That means it is flexible and dynamically configured, not painstakingly set up ahead of time and left alone.

Since it is a focused operation, targeting only the data needed, it must be able to get the maximum out of each Source. This requires two levels of complexity not common in other types of connectors or crawlers. These Sources have specific protocols and search languages and often security requirements. All these must be handled by the FS Connector so that the search is faithfully translated to the language of the Source, and the results are accurately retrieved. Second is getting the retrieved data into a useable form (and format). This involves a “deep extract” involving record formats, field/tag/schema semantics, content semantics, data normalization and cleansing, reference to ontologies, field splitting, field combination, entity extraction on rules and vocabularies, conversion to standard forms, enhancement with data from third Sources, and other manipulations. None of this is off-the-shelf processing where a single connector can be parameterized to work with all Sources. So FS has started at the “single, deep” end of the spectrum (crawlers are the epitome of the “broad, shallow” end) and builds Connectors to the characteristics of each Source.

These Connectors bring focused, quality data, but they come at a price. Vivisimo and MuseGlobal, and the other FS vendors build a very special type of software – something that we know will eventually fail, when the characteristics of the Source change. This needs a special dynamic architecture to accommodate it. It needs very powerful ways to build Connectors which can involve data analysts and programmers, as well as highly sophisticated tools, such as the Muse Connector Builder. It needs a robust and automated way to check for end-of-life situations, such as the Muse Source Checker, and a highly automated build and deploy process – the Muse Source Factory has been delivering automated software updates for 11 years now. Source Connectors *will* stop working, and a big part of a viable FS ecosystem is being able to get them back on line quickly and reliably.   MuseGlobal has put together a data virtualization platform with thousands of Connectors, because we know there’s a one-on-one relationship with each data source if you want to connect to the world out there.   Figuring out the unstructured data problem was one of our main goals at Muse from the very beginning, some 11 years ago.

Of course, building Connectors in the first place is an equal challenge, including the human element of dealing with a multitude of companies publishing information and data. This is something all FS vendors have to handle, and MuseGlobal chose to create a Content Partner Program about 10 years ago where we talk regularly to hundreds of major Sources and content vendors. Breadth of coverage of the Connector library is a major factor in “getting up and running” time, and a major investment for the FS vendors. We believe that Muse has one of the largest libraries with over 6,000 Source specific Connectors, as well as all the standard API and protocol and search languages ones for access where that is appropriate – but still with the “deep extraction” which is the hallmark of Federated Search.

It is not an easy task to get right at a quality and sustainable level, but a few vendors have produced the technology. MuseGlobal is one – and Vivisimo is another.

IBM Analytics and Watson are set for a real quality revolution!

Another analyst 's comments can be found on enterprise search blog at [6].


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