This is the first webinar of a Back to Basics series that will introduce you to the MongoDB database, what it is, why you would use it, and what you would use it for.
Conceptos básicos. Seminario web 2: Su primera aplicación MongoDBMongoDB
Este es el segundo seminario web de la serie Conceptos básicos, en la que se realiza una introducción a la base de datos MongoDB. En este seminario web mostraremos cómo construir una aplicación de creación de blogs en MongoDB.
Conceptos básicos. Seminario web 4: Indexación avanzada, índices de texto y g...MongoDB
Este es el cuarto seminario web de la serie Conceptos básicos, en la que se realiza una introducción a la base de datos MongoDB. Este seminario se ve en la compatibilidad con índices de texto libre y geoespaciales.
To understand how to make your application fast, it's important to understand what makes the database fast. We will take a detailed look at how to think about performance, and how different choices in schema design affect your cluster performances depending on storage engines used and physical resources available.
Beyond the Basics 2: Aggregation Framework MongoDB
The aggregation framework is one of the most powerful analytical tools available with MongoDB.
Learn how to create a pipeline of operations that can reshape and transform your data and apply a range of analytics functions and calculations to produce summary results across a data set.
Webinar: Getting Started with MongoDB - Back to BasicsMongoDB
Part one an Introduction to MongoDB. Learn how easy it is to start building applications with MongoDB. This session covers key features and functionality of MongoDB and sets out the course of building an application.
Conceptos básicos. seminario web 3 : Diseño de esquema pensado para documentosMongoDB
Este es el tercer seminario web de la serie Conceptos básicos, en la que se realiza una introducción a la base de datos MongoDB. En este seminario web se explica la arquitectura de las bases de datos de documentos.
Conceptos básicos. Seminario web 2: Su primera aplicación MongoDBMongoDB
Este es el segundo seminario web de la serie Conceptos básicos, en la que se realiza una introducción a la base de datos MongoDB. En este seminario web mostraremos cómo construir una aplicación de creación de blogs en MongoDB.
Conceptos básicos. Seminario web 4: Indexación avanzada, índices de texto y g...MongoDB
Este es el cuarto seminario web de la serie Conceptos básicos, en la que se realiza una introducción a la base de datos MongoDB. Este seminario se ve en la compatibilidad con índices de texto libre y geoespaciales.
To understand how to make your application fast, it's important to understand what makes the database fast. We will take a detailed look at how to think about performance, and how different choices in schema design affect your cluster performances depending on storage engines used and physical resources available.
Beyond the Basics 2: Aggregation Framework MongoDB
The aggregation framework is one of the most powerful analytical tools available with MongoDB.
Learn how to create a pipeline of operations that can reshape and transform your data and apply a range of analytics functions and calculations to produce summary results across a data set.
Webinar: Getting Started with MongoDB - Back to BasicsMongoDB
Part one an Introduction to MongoDB. Learn how easy it is to start building applications with MongoDB. This session covers key features and functionality of MongoDB and sets out the course of building an application.
Conceptos básicos. seminario web 3 : Diseño de esquema pensado para documentosMongoDB
Este es el tercer seminario web de la serie Conceptos básicos, en la que se realiza una introducción a la base de datos MongoDB. En este seminario web se explica la arquitectura de las bases de datos de documentos.
Webinar: Back to Basics: Thinking in DocumentsMongoDB
New applications, users and inputs demand new types of data, like unstructured, semi-structured and polymorphic data. Adopting MongoDB means adopting to a new, document-based data model.
While most developers have internalized the rules of thumb for designing schemas for relational databases, these rules don't apply to MongoDB. Documents can represent rich data structures, providing lots of viable alternatives to the standard, normalized, relational model. In addition, MongoDB has several unique features, such as atomic updates and indexed array keys, that greatly influence the kinds of schemas that make sense.
In this session, Buzz Moschetti explores how you can take advantage of MongoDB's document model to build modern applications.
Intro to MongoDB
Get a jumpstart on MongoDB, use cases, and next steps for building your first app with Buzz Moschetti, MongoDB Enterprise Architect.
@BuzzMoschetti
This presentation was given at the LDS Tech SORT Conference 2011 in Salt Lake City. The slides are quite comprehensive covering many topics on MongoDB. Rather than a traditional presentation, this was presented as more of a Q & A session. Topics covered include. Introduction to MongoDB, Use Cases, Schema design, High availability (replication) and Horizontal Scaling (sharding).
Back to Basics Webinar 3: Schema Design Thinking in DocumentsMongoDB
This is the third webinar of a Back to Basics series that will introduce you to the MongoDB database. This webinar will explain the architecture of document databases.
Back to Basics, webinar 2: La tua prima applicazione MongoDBMongoDB
Questo è il secondo webinar della serie Back to Basics che ti offrirà un'introduzione al database MongoDB. In questo webinar ti dimostreremo come creare un'applicazione base per il blogging in MongoDB.
Webinar: Best Practices for Getting Started with MongoDBMongoDB
MongoDB adoption continues to grow at a record pace due to the significant enhancements in developer productivity and scalability that the database provides. Occasionally, however, organizations new to the technology make mistakes that limit their ability to leverage the significant advantages MongoDB provides. This webinar will discuss some of the common mistakes made by users when they first start working with MongoDB, how to identify when you've made those mistakes, and how to resolve them.
Conceptos básicos. Seminario web 5: Introducción a Aggregation FrameworkMongoDB
Este es el quinto seminario web de la serie Conceptos básicos, en la que se realiza una introducción a la base de datos MongoDB. En este seminario web, se analizan los aspectos básicos de Aggregation Framework.
MongoDB Days Silicon Valley: Jumpstart: Ops/Admin 101MongoDB
Presented by Achille Brighton, Principal Consulting Engineer, MongoDB
Experience level: Introductory
New to MongoDB? We'll provide an overview of installation, high availability through replication, scale out through sharding, and options for monitoring and backup. No prior knowledge of MongoDB is assumed. This session will jumpstart your knowledge of MongoDB operations, providing you with context for the rest of the day's content.
Speaker: Daniel Coupal
At this point, you may be familiar with the design of MongoDB databases and collections – but what are the frequent patterns you may have to model?
This presentation will add knowledge of how to represent common relationships (1-1, 1-N, N-N) in MongoDB. Going further than relationships, this presentation identifies a set of common patterns, in a similar way to what the Gang of Four did for Object Oriented Design. Finally, this presentation will guide you through the steps of modeling those patterns in MongoDB collections.
In this session, you will learn about:
How to create the appropriate MongoDB collections for some of the patterns discussed.
Differences in relationships vs. the relational database world, and how those differences translate to MongoDB collections.
Common patterns in developing applications with MongoDB, plus a specific vocabulary with which to refer to them.
Back to Basics Webinar 5: Introduction to the Aggregation FrameworkMongoDB
This is the fifth webinar of a Back to Basics series that will introduce you to the MongoDB database. This webinar will introduce you to the aggregation framework.
MongoDB Schema Design: Practical Applications and ImplicationsMongoDB
Presented by Austin Zellner, Solutions Architect, MongoDB
Schema design is as much art as it is science, but it is central to understanding how to get the most out of MongoDB. Attendees will walk away with an understanding of how to approach schema design, what influences it, and the science behind the art. After this session, attendees will be ready to design new schemas, as well as re-evaluate existing schemas with a new mental model.
MongoDB Days Silicon Valley: Winning the Dreamforce Hackathon with MongoDBMongoDB
Presented by Greg Deeds, CEO, Technology Exploration Group
Experience level: Introductory
A two person team using MongoDB and Salesforce.com created a geospatial machine learning tool from various datasets, parsing, indexing, and mapreduce in 24 hours. The amazing hack that beat 350 teams from around the world designer Greg Deeds will speak on getting to the winners circle with MongoDB power. It was MongoDB that proved to be the teams secret weapon to level the playing field for the win!
Conceptos básicos. Seminario web 6: Despliegue de producciónMongoDB
Este es el último seminario web de la serie Conceptos básicos, en la que se realiza una introducción a la base de datos MongoDB. En este seminario web le guiaremos por el despliegue en producción.
This tutorial will introduce the features of MongoDB by building a simple location-based application using MongoDB. The tutorial will cover the basics of MongoDB’s document model, query language, map-reduce framework and deployment architecture.
The tutorial will be divided into 5 sections:
Data modeling with MongoDB: documents, collections and databases
Querying your data: simple queries, geospatial queries, and text-searching
Writes and updates: using MongoDB’s atomic update modifiers
Trending and analytics: Using mapreduce and MongoDB’s aggregation framework
Deploying the sample application
Besides the knowledge to start building their own applications with MongoDB, attendees will finish the session with a working application they use to check into locations around Portland from any HTML5 enabled phone!
TUTORIAL PREREQUISITES
Each attendee should have a running version of MongoDB. Preferably the latest unstable release 2.1.x, but any install after 2.0 should be fine. You can dowload MongoDB at http://www.mongodb.org/downloads.
Instructions for installing MongoDB are at http://docs.mongodb.org/manual/installation/.
Additionally we will be building an app in Ruby. Ruby 1.9.3+ is required for this. The current latest version of ruby is 1.9.3-p194.
For windows download the http://rubyinstaller.org/
For OSX download http://unfiniti.com/software/mac/jewelrybox/
For linux most users should know how to for their own distributions.
We will be using the following GEMs and they MUST BE installed ahead of time so you can be ahead of the game and safe in the event that the Internet isn’t accommodating.
bson (1.6.4)
bson_ext (1.6.4)
haml (3.1.4)
mongo (1.6.4)
rack (1.4.1)
rack-protection (1.2.0)
rack shotgun (0.9)
sinatra (1.3.2)
tilt (1.3.3)
Prior ruby experience isn’t required for this. We will NOT be using rails for this app.
Webinar: Back to Basics: Thinking in DocumentsMongoDB
New applications, users and inputs demand new types of data, like unstructured, semi-structured and polymorphic data. Adopting MongoDB means adopting to a new, document-based data model.
While most developers have internalized the rules of thumb for designing schemas for relational databases, these rules don't apply to MongoDB. Documents can represent rich data structures, providing lots of viable alternatives to the standard, normalized, relational model. In addition, MongoDB has several unique features, such as atomic updates and indexed array keys, that greatly influence the kinds of schemas that make sense.
In this session, Buzz Moschetti explores how you can take advantage of MongoDB's document model to build modern applications.
Intro to MongoDB
Get a jumpstart on MongoDB, use cases, and next steps for building your first app with Buzz Moschetti, MongoDB Enterprise Architect.
@BuzzMoschetti
This presentation was given at the LDS Tech SORT Conference 2011 in Salt Lake City. The slides are quite comprehensive covering many topics on MongoDB. Rather than a traditional presentation, this was presented as more of a Q & A session. Topics covered include. Introduction to MongoDB, Use Cases, Schema design, High availability (replication) and Horizontal Scaling (sharding).
Back to Basics Webinar 3: Schema Design Thinking in DocumentsMongoDB
This is the third webinar of a Back to Basics series that will introduce you to the MongoDB database. This webinar will explain the architecture of document databases.
Back to Basics, webinar 2: La tua prima applicazione MongoDBMongoDB
Questo è il secondo webinar della serie Back to Basics che ti offrirà un'introduzione al database MongoDB. In questo webinar ti dimostreremo come creare un'applicazione base per il blogging in MongoDB.
Webinar: Best Practices for Getting Started with MongoDBMongoDB
MongoDB adoption continues to grow at a record pace due to the significant enhancements in developer productivity and scalability that the database provides. Occasionally, however, organizations new to the technology make mistakes that limit their ability to leverage the significant advantages MongoDB provides. This webinar will discuss some of the common mistakes made by users when they first start working with MongoDB, how to identify when you've made those mistakes, and how to resolve them.
Conceptos básicos. Seminario web 5: Introducción a Aggregation FrameworkMongoDB
Este es el quinto seminario web de la serie Conceptos básicos, en la que se realiza una introducción a la base de datos MongoDB. En este seminario web, se analizan los aspectos básicos de Aggregation Framework.
MongoDB Days Silicon Valley: Jumpstart: Ops/Admin 101MongoDB
Presented by Achille Brighton, Principal Consulting Engineer, MongoDB
Experience level: Introductory
New to MongoDB? We'll provide an overview of installation, high availability through replication, scale out through sharding, and options for monitoring and backup. No prior knowledge of MongoDB is assumed. This session will jumpstart your knowledge of MongoDB operations, providing you with context for the rest of the day's content.
Speaker: Daniel Coupal
At this point, you may be familiar with the design of MongoDB databases and collections – but what are the frequent patterns you may have to model?
This presentation will add knowledge of how to represent common relationships (1-1, 1-N, N-N) in MongoDB. Going further than relationships, this presentation identifies a set of common patterns, in a similar way to what the Gang of Four did for Object Oriented Design. Finally, this presentation will guide you through the steps of modeling those patterns in MongoDB collections.
In this session, you will learn about:
How to create the appropriate MongoDB collections for some of the patterns discussed.
Differences in relationships vs. the relational database world, and how those differences translate to MongoDB collections.
Common patterns in developing applications with MongoDB, plus a specific vocabulary with which to refer to them.
Back to Basics Webinar 5: Introduction to the Aggregation FrameworkMongoDB
This is the fifth webinar of a Back to Basics series that will introduce you to the MongoDB database. This webinar will introduce you to the aggregation framework.
MongoDB Schema Design: Practical Applications and ImplicationsMongoDB
Presented by Austin Zellner, Solutions Architect, MongoDB
Schema design is as much art as it is science, but it is central to understanding how to get the most out of MongoDB. Attendees will walk away with an understanding of how to approach schema design, what influences it, and the science behind the art. After this session, attendees will be ready to design new schemas, as well as re-evaluate existing schemas with a new mental model.
MongoDB Days Silicon Valley: Winning the Dreamforce Hackathon with MongoDBMongoDB
Presented by Greg Deeds, CEO, Technology Exploration Group
Experience level: Introductory
A two person team using MongoDB and Salesforce.com created a geospatial machine learning tool from various datasets, parsing, indexing, and mapreduce in 24 hours. The amazing hack that beat 350 teams from around the world designer Greg Deeds will speak on getting to the winners circle with MongoDB power. It was MongoDB that proved to be the teams secret weapon to level the playing field for the win!
Conceptos básicos. Seminario web 6: Despliegue de producciónMongoDB
Este es el último seminario web de la serie Conceptos básicos, en la que se realiza una introducción a la base de datos MongoDB. En este seminario web le guiaremos por el despliegue en producción.
This tutorial will introduce the features of MongoDB by building a simple location-based application using MongoDB. The tutorial will cover the basics of MongoDB’s document model, query language, map-reduce framework and deployment architecture.
The tutorial will be divided into 5 sections:
Data modeling with MongoDB: documents, collections and databases
Querying your data: simple queries, geospatial queries, and text-searching
Writes and updates: using MongoDB’s atomic update modifiers
Trending and analytics: Using mapreduce and MongoDB’s aggregation framework
Deploying the sample application
Besides the knowledge to start building their own applications with MongoDB, attendees will finish the session with a working application they use to check into locations around Portland from any HTML5 enabled phone!
TUTORIAL PREREQUISITES
Each attendee should have a running version of MongoDB. Preferably the latest unstable release 2.1.x, but any install after 2.0 should be fine. You can dowload MongoDB at http://www.mongodb.org/downloads.
Instructions for installing MongoDB are at http://docs.mongodb.org/manual/installation/.
Additionally we will be building an app in Ruby. Ruby 1.9.3+ is required for this. The current latest version of ruby is 1.9.3-p194.
For windows download the http://rubyinstaller.org/
For OSX download http://unfiniti.com/software/mac/jewelrybox/
For linux most users should know how to for their own distributions.
We will be using the following GEMs and they MUST BE installed ahead of time so you can be ahead of the game and safe in the event that the Internet isn’t accommodating.
bson (1.6.4)
bson_ext (1.6.4)
haml (3.1.4)
mongo (1.6.4)
rack (1.4.1)
rack-protection (1.2.0)
rack shotgun (0.9)
sinatra (1.3.2)
tilt (1.3.3)
Prior ruby experience isn’t required for this. We will NOT be using rails for this app.
The storage engine is responsible for managing how data is stored, both in memory and on disk. MongoDB supports multiple storage engines, as different engines perform better for specific workloads.
View this presentation to understand:
What a storage engine is
How to pick a storage engine
How to configure a storage engine and a replica set
Back to Basics, webinar 4: Indicizzazione avanzata, indici testuali e geospaz...MongoDB
Questo è il quarto webinar della serie Back to Basics che ti offrirà un'introduzione al database MongoDB. Questo webinar guarda supporto all'indice full-text e il supporto geospaziale.
Back to Basics Webinar 6: Production DeploymentMongoDB
This is the final webinar of a Back to Basics series that will introduce you to the MongoDB database. This webinar will guide you through production deployment.
Back to Basics Webinar 4: Advanced Indexing, Text and Geospatial IndexesMongoDB
This is the fourth webinar of a Back to Basics series that will introduce you to the MongoDB database. This webinar will introduce you to the aggregation framework.
Back to Basics: My First MongoDB ApplicationMongoDB
This Back to Basics webinar series will introduce you to NoSQL and the MongoDB database. You will find out what MongoDB is, why you would use it, and what you would use it for.
Exploring the World at Scale, the Challenges it poses and how MongoDB can help address those challenges. We will also explore the Black Swan Problem at work in various industries and how one can use MongoDB to address IT challenges due to Positive Black Swans, Negative Black Swans and Standard Use Cases
These are the slides I presented at the Nosql Night in Boston on Nov 4, 2014. The slides were adapted from a presentation given by Steve Francia in 2011. Original slide deck can be found here:
http://spf13.com/presentation/mongodb-sort-conference-2011
Speaker: Jay Runkel
When architecting a MongoDB application, one of the most difficult questions to answer is how much hardware (number of shards, number of replicas, and server specifications) am I going to need for an application. Similarly, when deploying in the cloud, how do you estimate your monthly AWS, Azure, or GCP costs given a description of a new application? While there isn't a precise formula for mapping application features (e.g., document structure, schema, query volumes) into servers, there are various strategies you can use to estimate the MongoDB cluster sizing. This presentation will cover the questions you need to ask and describe how to use this information to estimate the required cluster size or cloud deployment cost.
Open Source North - MongoDB Advanced Schema Design PatternsMatthew Kalan
The hardest part of moving from a tabular database world to a modern world of objects and JSON is how to model your data. This year at OSN, Matt from MongoDB will take data modeling one step further than prior years and focus specifically on advanced schema design patterns to optimize the ease-of-use and performance of your data access layer and application.
Getting Started with Geospatial Data in MongoDBMongoDB
MongoDB supports geospatial data and specialized indexes that make building location-aware applications easy and scalable.
In this session, you will learn the fundamentals of working with geospatial data in MongoDB. We will explore how to store and index geospatial data and best practices for using geospatial query operators and methods. By the end of this session, you should be able to implement basic geolocation functionality in an application.
In this webinar, you will learn:
- Getting geospatial data into MongoDB and how to build geospatial indexes.
- The fundamentals of MongoDB's geospatial query operators and how to design queries that meet the needs of your application.
- Advanced geospatial capabilities with Java geospatial libraries and MongoDB.
New to MongoDB? We'll provide an overview of installation, high availability through replication, scale out through sharding, and options for monitoring and backup. No prior knowledge of MongoDB is assumed. This session will jumpstart your knowledge of MongoDB operations, providing you with context for the rest of the day's content.
When it comes time to select database software for your project, there are a bewildering number of choices. How do you know if your project is a good fit for a relational database, or whether one of the many NoSQL options is a better choice?
In this webinar you will learn when to use MongoDB and how to evaluate if MongoDB is a fit for your project. You will see how MongoDB's flexible document model is solving business problems in ways that were not previously possible, and how MongoDB's built-in features allow running at scale.
Topics covered include:
Performance and Scalability
MongoDB's Data Model
Popular MongoDB Use Cases
Customer Stories
Similar to Back to Basics Webinar 1: Introduction to NoSQL (20)
MongoDB SoCal 2020: Migrate Anything* to MongoDB AtlasMongoDB
During this talk we'll navigate through a customer's journey as they migrate an existing MongoDB deployment to MongoDB Atlas. While the migration itself can be as simple as a few clicks, the prep/post effort requires due diligence to ensure a smooth transfer. We'll cover these steps in detail and provide best practices. In addition, we’ll provide an overview of what to consider when migrating other cloud data stores, traditional databases and MongoDB imitations to MongoDB Atlas.
MongoDB SoCal 2020: Go on a Data Safari with MongoDB Charts!MongoDB
These days, everyone is expected to be a data analyst. But with so much data available, how can you make sense of it and be sure you're making the best decisions? One great approach is to use data visualizations. In this session, we take a complex dataset and show how the breadth of capabilities in MongoDB Charts can help you turn bits and bytes into insights.
MongoDB SoCal 2020: Using MongoDB Services in Kubernetes: Any Platform, Devel...MongoDB
MongoDB Kubernetes operator and MongoDB Open Service Broker are ready for production operations. Learn about how MongoDB can be used with the most popular container orchestration platform, Kubernetes, and bring self-service, persistent storage to your containerized applications. A demo will show you how easy it is to enable MongoDB clusters as an External Service using the Open Service Broker API for MongoDB
MongoDB SoCal 2020: A Complete Methodology of Data Modeling for MongoDBMongoDB
Are you new to schema design for MongoDB, or are you looking for a more complete or agile process than what you are following currently? In this talk, we will guide you through the phases of a flexible methodology that you can apply to projects ranging from small to large with very demanding requirements.
MongoDB SoCal 2020: From Pharmacist to Analyst: Leveraging MongoDB for Real-T...MongoDB
Humana, like many companies, is tackling the challenge of creating real-time insights from data that is diverse and rapidly changing. This is our journey of how we used MongoDB to combined traditional batch approaches with streaming technologies to provide continues alerting capabilities from real-time data streams.
MongoDB SoCal 2020: Best Practices for Working with IoT and Time-series DataMongoDB
Time series data is increasingly at the heart of modern applications - think IoT, stock trading, clickstreams, social media, and more. With the move from batch to real time systems, the efficient capture and analysis of time series data can enable organizations to better detect and respond to events ahead of their competitors or to improve operational efficiency to reduce cost and risk. Working with time series data is often different from regular application data, and there are best practices you should observe.
This talk covers:
Common components of an IoT solution
The challenges involved with managing time-series data in IoT applications
Different schema designs, and how these affect memory and disk utilization – two critical factors in application performance.
How to query, analyze and present IoT time-series data using MongoDB Compass and MongoDB Charts
At the end of the session, you will have a better understanding of key best practices in managing IoT time-series data with MongoDB.
Join this talk and test session with a MongoDB Developer Advocate where you'll go over the setup, configuration, and deployment of an Atlas environment. Create a service that you can take back in a production-ready state and prepare to unleash your inner genius.
MongoDB .local San Francisco 2020: Powering the new age data demands [Infosys]MongoDB
Our clients have unique use cases and data patterns that mandate the choice of a particular strategy. To implement these strategies, it is mandatory that we unlearn a lot of relational concepts while designing and rapidly developing efficient applications on NoSQL. In this session, we will talk about some of our client use cases, the strategies we have adopted, and the features of MongoDB that assisted in implementing these strategies.
MongoDB .local San Francisco 2020: Using Client Side Encryption in MongoDB 4.2MongoDB
Encryption is not a new concept to MongoDB. Encryption may occur in-transit (with TLS) and at-rest (with the encrypted storage engine). But MongoDB 4.2 introduces support for Client Side Encryption, ensuring the most sensitive data is encrypted before ever leaving the client application. Even full access to your MongoDB servers is not enough to decrypt this data. And better yet, Client Side Encryption can be enabled at the "flick of a switch".
This session covers using Client Side Encryption in your applications. This includes the necessary setup, how to encrypt data without sacrificing queryability, and what trade-offs to expect.
MongoDB .local San Francisco 2020: Using MongoDB Services in Kubernetes: any ...MongoDB
MongoDB Kubernetes operator is ready for prime-time. Learn about how MongoDB can be used with most popular orchestration platform, Kubernetes, and bring self-service, persistent storage to your containerized applications.
MongoDB .local San Francisco 2020: Go on a Data Safari with MongoDB Charts!MongoDB
These days, everyone is expected to be a data analyst. But with so much data available, how can you make sense of it and be sure you're making the best decisions? One great approach is to use data visualizations. In this session, we take a complex dataset and show how the breadth of capabilities in MongoDB Charts can help you turn bits and bytes into insights.
MongoDB .local San Francisco 2020: From SQL to NoSQL -- Changing Your MindsetMongoDB
When you need to model data, is your first instinct to start breaking it down into rows and columns? Mine used to be too. When you want to develop apps in a modern, agile way, NoSQL databases can be the best option. Come to this talk to learn how to take advantage of all that NoSQL databases have to offer and discover the benefits of changing your mindset from the legacy, tabular way of modeling data. We’ll compare and contrast the terms and concepts in SQL databases and MongoDB, explain the benefits of using MongoDB compared to SQL databases, and walk through data modeling basics so you feel confident as you begin using MongoDB.
MongoDB .local San Francisco 2020: MongoDB Atlas JumpstartMongoDB
Join this talk and test session with a MongoDB Developer Advocate where you'll go over the setup, configuration, and deployment of an Atlas environment. Create a service that you can take back in a production-ready state and prepare to unleash your inner genius.
MongoDB .local San Francisco 2020: Tips and Tricks++ for Querying and Indexin...MongoDB
Query performance should be the unsung hero of an application, but without proper configuration, can become a constant headache. When used properly, MongoDB provides extremely powerful querying capabilities. In this session, we'll discuss concepts like equality, sort, range, managing query predicates versus sequential predicates, and best practices to building multikey indexes.
MongoDB .local San Francisco 2020: Aggregation Pipeline Power++MongoDB
Aggregation pipeline has been able to power your analysis of data since version 2.2. In 4.2 we added more power and now you can use it for more powerful queries, updates, and outputting your data to existing collections. Come hear how you can do everything with the pipeline, including single-view, ETL, data roll-ups and materialized views.
MongoDB .local San Francisco 2020: A Complete Methodology of Data Modeling fo...MongoDB
Are you new to schema design for MongoDB, or are you looking for a more complete or agile process than what you are following currently? In this talk, we will guide you through the phases of a flexible methodology that you can apply to projects ranging from small to large with very demanding requirements.
MongoDB .local San Francisco 2020: MongoDB Atlas Data Lake Technical Deep DiveMongoDB
MongoDB Atlas Data Lake is a new service offered by MongoDB Atlas. Many organizations store long term, archival data in cost-effective storage like S3, GCP, and Azure Blobs. However, many of them do not have robust systems or tools to effectively utilize large amounts of data to inform decision making. MongoDB Atlas Data Lake is a service allowing organizations to analyze their long-term data to discover a wealth of information about their business.
This session will take a deep dive into the features that are currently available in MongoDB Atlas Data Lake and how they are implemented. In addition, we'll discuss future plans and opportunities and offer ample Q&A time with the engineers on the project.
MongoDB .local San Francisco 2020: Developing Alexa Skills with MongoDB & GolangMongoDB
Virtual assistants are becoming the new norm when it comes to daily life, with Amazon’s Alexa being the leader in the space. As a developer, not only do you need to make web and mobile compliant applications, but you need to be able to support virtual assistants like Alexa. However, the process isn’t quite the same between the platforms.
How do you handle requests? Where do you store your data and work with it to create meaningful responses with little delay? How much of your code needs to change between platforms?
In this session we’ll see how to design and develop applications known as Skills for Amazon Alexa powered devices using the Go programming language and MongoDB.
MongoDB .local Paris 2020: Realm : l'ingrédient secret pour de meilleures app...MongoDB
aux Core Data, appréciée par des centaines de milliers de développeurs. Apprenez ce qui rend Realm spécial et comment il peut être utilisé pour créer de meilleures applications plus rapidement.
MongoDB .local Paris 2020: Upply @MongoDB : Upply : Quand le Machine Learning...MongoDB
Il n’a jamais été aussi facile de commander en ligne et de se faire livrer en moins de 48h très souvent gratuitement. Cette simplicité d’usage cache un marché complexe de plus de 8000 milliards de $.
La data est bien connu du monde de la Supply Chain (itinéraires, informations sur les marchandises, douanes,…), mais la valeur de ces données opérationnelles reste peu exploitée. En alliant expertise métier et Data Science, Upply redéfinit les fondamentaux de la Supply Chain en proposant à chacun des acteurs de surmonter la volatilité et l’inefficacité du marché.
As Europe's leading economic powerhouse and the fourth-largest hashtag#economy globally, Germany stands at the forefront of innovation and industrial might. Renowned for its precision engineering and high-tech sectors, Germany's economic structure is heavily supported by a robust service industry, accounting for approximately 68% of its GDP. This economic clout and strategic geopolitical stance position Germany as a focal point in the global cyber threat landscape.
In the face of escalating global tensions, particularly those emanating from geopolitical disputes with nations like hashtag#Russia and hashtag#China, hashtag#Germany has witnessed a significant uptick in targeted cyber operations. Our analysis indicates a marked increase in hashtag#cyberattack sophistication aimed at critical infrastructure and key industrial sectors. These attacks range from ransomware campaigns to hashtag#AdvancedPersistentThreats (hashtag#APTs), threatening national security and business integrity.
🔑 Key findings include:
🔍 Increased frequency and complexity of cyber threats.
🔍 Escalation of state-sponsored and criminally motivated cyber operations.
🔍 Active dark web exchanges of malicious tools and tactics.
Our comprehensive report delves into these challenges, using a blend of open-source and proprietary data collection techniques. By monitoring activity on critical networks and analyzing attack patterns, our team provides a detailed overview of the threats facing German entities.
This report aims to equip stakeholders across public and private sectors with the knowledge to enhance their defensive strategies, reduce exposure to cyber risks, and reinforce Germany's resilience against cyber threats.
Opendatabay - Open Data Marketplace.pptxOpendatabay
Opendatabay.com unlocks the power of data for everyone. Open Data Marketplace fosters a collaborative hub for data enthusiasts to explore, share, and contribute to a vast collection of datasets.
First ever open hub for data enthusiasts to collaborate and innovate. A platform to explore, share, and contribute to a vast collection of datasets. Through robust quality control and innovative technologies like blockchain verification, opendatabay ensures the authenticity and reliability of datasets, empowering users to make data-driven decisions with confidence. Leverage cutting-edge AI technologies to enhance the data exploration, analysis, and discovery experience.
From intelligent search and recommendations to automated data productisation and quotation, Opendatabay AI-driven features streamline the data workflow. Finding the data you need shouldn't be a complex. Opendatabay simplifies the data acquisition process with an intuitive interface and robust search tools. Effortlessly explore, discover, and access the data you need, allowing you to focus on extracting valuable insights. Opendatabay breaks new ground with a dedicated, AI-generated, synthetic datasets.
Leverage these privacy-preserving datasets for training and testing AI models without compromising sensitive information. Opendatabay prioritizes transparency by providing detailed metadata, provenance information, and usage guidelines for each dataset, ensuring users have a comprehensive understanding of the data they're working with. By leveraging a powerful combination of distributed ledger technology and rigorous third-party audits Opendatabay ensures the authenticity and reliability of every dataset. Security is at the core of Opendatabay. Marketplace implements stringent security measures, including encryption, access controls, and regular vulnerability assessments, to safeguard your data and protect your privacy.
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Empowering the Data Analytics Ecosystem: A Laser Focus on Value
The data analytics ecosystem thrives when every component functions at its peak, unlocking the true potential of data. Here's a laser focus on key areas for an empowered ecosystem:
1. Democratize Access, Not Data:
Granular Access Controls: Provide users with self-service tools tailored to their specific needs, preventing data overload and misuse.
Data Catalogs: Implement robust data catalogs for easy discovery and understanding of available data sources.
2. Foster Collaboration with Clear Roles:
Data Mesh Architecture: Break down data silos by creating a distributed data ownership model with clear ownership and responsibilities.
Collaborative Workspaces: Utilize interactive platforms where data scientists, analysts, and domain experts can work seamlessly together.
3. Leverage Advanced Analytics Strategically:
AI-powered Automation: Automate repetitive tasks like data cleaning and feature engineering, freeing up data talent for higher-level analysis.
Right-Tool Selection: Strategically choose the most effective advanced analytics techniques (e.g., AI, ML) based on specific business problems.
4. Prioritize Data Quality with Automation:
Automated Data Validation: Implement automated data quality checks to identify and rectify errors at the source, minimizing downstream issues.
Data Lineage Tracking: Track the flow of data throughout the ecosystem, ensuring transparency and facilitating root cause analysis for errors.
5. Cultivate a Data-Driven Mindset:
Metrics-Driven Performance Management: Align KPIs and performance metrics with data-driven insights to ensure actionable decision making.
Data Storytelling Workshops: Equip stakeholders with the skills to translate complex data findings into compelling narratives that drive action.
Benefits of a Precise Ecosystem:
Sharpened Focus: Precise access and clear roles ensure everyone works with the most relevant data, maximizing efficiency.
Actionable Insights: Strategic analytics and automated quality checks lead to more reliable and actionable data insights.
Continuous Improvement: Data-driven performance management fosters a culture of learning and continuous improvement.
Sustainable Growth: Empowered by data, organizations can make informed decisions to drive sustainable growth and innovation.
By focusing on these precise actions, organizations can create an empowered data analytics ecosystem that delivers real value by driving data-driven decisions and maximizing the return on their data investment.
Explore our comprehensive data analysis project presentation on predicting product ad campaign performance. Learn how data-driven insights can optimize your marketing strategies and enhance campaign effectiveness. Perfect for professionals and students looking to understand the power of data analysis in advertising. for more details visit: https://bostoninstituteofanalytics.org/data-science-and-artificial-intelligence/
5. 5
Course Agenda
Date Time Webinar
05-May-2016 14:00 GMT Introduction to NoSQL
24-May-2016 14.00 GMT Your First MongoDB Application
14-Jun-2016 14:00 GMT Schema Design – Thinking in Documents
05-July-2016 14:00 GMT Advanced Indexing : Text and Geo-Spatial Indexes
14-July-2016 14:00 GMT Introduction to the Aggregation Framework
11-Aug-2016 14:00 GMT Production Deployment
6. 6
Agenda for Today
• Why NoSQL
• The different types of NoSQL database
• Detailed overview of MongoDB
• MongoDB data durability – Replica Sets
• MongoDB scalability – Sharding
• Q&A
12. 12
Key Value Stores
• An associative array
• Single key lookup
• Very fast single key lookup
• Not so hot for “reverse lookups”
Key Value
12345 4567.3456787
12346 { addr1 : “The Grange”, addr2: “Dublin” }
12347 “top secret password”
12358 “Shopping basket value : 24560”
12787 12345
13. 13
Revision : Row Stores (RDBMS)
• Store data aligned by rows (traditional RDBMS, e.g MySQL)
• Reads retrieve a complete row everytime
• Reads requiring only one or two columns are wasteful
ID Name Salary Start Date
1 Joe D $24000 1/Jun/1970
2 Peter J $28000 1/Feb/1972
3 Phil G $23000 1/Jan/1973
1 Joe D $24000 1/Jun/1970 2 Peter J $28000 1/Feb/1972 3 Phil G $23000 1/Jan/1973
14. 14
How a Column Store Does it
1 2 3
ID Name Salary Start Date
1 Joe D $24000 1/Jun/1970
2 Peter J $28000 1/Feb/1972
3 Phil G $23000 1/Jan/1973
Joe D Peter J Phil G $24000 $28000 $23000 1/Jun/1970 1/Feb/1972 1/Jan/1973
15. 15
Why is this Attractive?
• A series of consecutive seeks can retrieve a column efficiently
• Compressing similar data is super efficient
• So reads can grab more data off disk in a single seek
• How do I align my rows? By order or by inserting a row ID
• IF you just need a small number of columns you don’t need to
read all the rows
• But:
– Updating and deleting by row is expensive
• Append only is preferred
• Better for OLAP than OLTP
16. 16
Graph Stores
• Store graphs (edges and vertexes)
• E.g. social networks
• Designed to allow efficient traversal
• Optimised for representing connections
• Can be implemented as a key value stored with the ability to store
links
• If your use case is not a graph you don’t need a graph database
17. 17
Multi-Model Databases
• Combine multiple storage/access models
• Often Graph plus “something else”
• Fixes the “polyglot persistence” issue of keeping multiple
independent databases consistent
• The “new new thing” in NoSQL Land
• Expect to hear more noise about these kinds of databases
18. 18
Document Store
• Not PDFs, Microsoft Word or HTML
• Documents are nested structures created using Javascript Object Notation (JSON)
{
name : “Joe Drumgoole”,
title : “Director of Developer Advocacy”,
Address : {
address1 : “Latin Hall”,
address2 : “Golden Lane”,
eircode : “D09 N623”,
}
expertise: [ “MongoDB”, “Python”, “Javascript” ],
employee_number : 320,
location : [ 53.34, -6.26 ]
}
20. 20
MongoDB Understands JSON Documents
• From the very first version it was a native JSON database
• Understands and can index the sub-structures
• Stores JSON as a binary format called BSON
• Efficient for encoding and decoding for network transmission
• MongoDB can create indexes on any document field
• (We will cover these areas in detail later on in the course)
21. 21
Why Documents?
• Dynamic Schema
• Elimination of Object/Relational Mapping Layer
• Implicit denormalisation of the data for performance
22. 22
Why Documents?
• Dynamic Schema
• Elimination of Object/Relational Mapping Layer
• Implicit denormalisation of the data for performance
23. 23
MongoDB is Full Featured
Rich
Queries
• Find Paul’s cars
• Find everybody in London with a car
between 1970 and 1980
Geospatial
• Find all of the car owners within 5km of
Trafalgar Sq.
Text Search
• Find all the cars described as having
leather seats
Aggregation
• Calculate the average value of Paul’s car
collection
Map
Reduce
• What is the ownership pattern of colors by
geography over time (is purple trending in
China?)
32. 32
Scalability with Sharding
• Shard key partitions the content
• MongoDB automatically balances the cluster
• Shards can be added dynamically to a live system
• Rebalancing happens in the background
• Shard key is immutable
• Shard key can vector queries to a specific shard
• Queries without a shard key are sent to all members
34. 34
Query Routing
• With a sharded cluster we use a routing layer to guide queries
• We use a daemon called MongoS (Mongo Shard Router)
• Daemon is stateless
• Can run as many as required
• Typically one per app server
35. 35
Summary
• Why NoSQL exists
• The types of NoSQL database
• The key features of MongoDB
• Data durability in MongoDB
• Scalability in MongoDB
36. 36
Next Webinar – Your First MongoDB Application
• 24th May 2016 – 14:00 GMT.
• Make sure to register if you haven’t already
• Learn how to build your first MongoDB application
• Create databases and collections
• Look at queries
• Build indexes
• Start to understand performance
• Register at: http://bit.ly/1UA4BGM
• Send feedback to back-to-basics@mongodb.com
Delighted to have you here. Hope you can make it to all the sessions. Sessions will be recorded so we can send them out afterwards so don’t worry if you miss one.
If you have questions please pop them in the sidebar.
A lot of people expect us to come in and bash relational database or say we don’t think they’re good. And that’s simply not true.
Relational databases has laid the foundation for what you’d want out of a database, and we absolutely think there are capabilities that remain critical today
Expressive query language & secondary Indexes. Users should be able to access and manipulate their data in sophisticated ways – and you need a query language that let’s you do all that out of the box. Indexes are a critical part of providing efficient access to data. We believe these are table stakes for a database.
Strong consistency. Strong consistency has become second nature for how we think about building applications, and for good reason. The database should always provide access to the most up-to-date copy of the data. Strong consistency is the right way to design a database.
Enterprise Management and Integrations. Finally, databases are just one piece of the puzzle, and they need to fit into the enterprise IT stack. Organizations need a database that can be secured, monitored, automated, and integrated with their existing IT infrastructure and staff, such as operations teams, DBAs, and data analysts.
But of course the world has changed a lot since the 1980s when the relational database first came about.
First of all, data and risk are significantly up.
In terms of data
90% data created in last 2 years - think about that for a moment, of all the data ever created, 90% of it was in the last 2 years
80% of enterprise data is unstructured - this is data that doesn’t fit into the neat tables of a relational database
Unstructured data is growing 2X rate of structured data
At the same time, risks of running a database are higher than ever before. You are now faced with:
More users - Apps have shifted from small internal departmental system with thousands of users to large external audiences with millions of users
No downtime - It’s no longer the case that apps only need to be available during standard business hours. They must be up 24/7.
All across the globe - your users are everywhere, and they are always connected
On the other hand, time and costs are way down.
There’s less time to build apps than ever before. You’re being asked to:
Ship apps in a few months not years - Development methods have shifted from a waterfall process to an iterative process that ships new functionality in weeks and in some cases multiple times per day at companies like Facebook and Amazon.
And costs are way down too. Companies want to:
Pay for value over time - Companies have shifted to open-source business and SaaS models that allow them to pay for value over time
Use cloud and commodity resources - to reduce the time to provision their infrastructure, and to lower their total cost of ownership
Because the relational database was not designed for modern applications, starting about 10 years ago a number of companies began to build their own databases that are fundamentally different. The market calls these NoSQL.
NoSQL databases were designed for this new world…
Flexibility. All of them have some kind of flexible data model to allow for faster iteration and to accommodate the data we see dominating modern applications. While they all have different approaches, what they have in common is they want to be more flexible.
Scalability + Performance. Similarly, they were all built with a focus on scalability, so they all include some form of sharding or partitioning. And they're all designed to deliver great performance. Some are better at reads, some are better at writes, but more or less they all strive to have better performance than a relational database.
Always-On Global Deployments. Lastly, NoSQL databases are designed for highly available systems that provide a consistent, high quality experience for users all over the world. They are designed to run on many computers, and they include replication to automatically synchronize the data across servers, racks, and data centers.
However, when you take a closer look at these NoSQL systems, it turns out they have thrown out the baby with the bathwater. They have sacrificed the core database capabilities you’ve come to expect and rely on in order to build fully functional apps, like rich querying and secondary indexes, strong consistency, and enterprise management.
MongoDB was built to address the way the world has changed while preserving the core database capabilities required to build modern applications.
Our vision is to leverage the work that Oracle and others have done over the last 40 years to make relational databases what they are today, and to take the reins from here. We pick up where they left off, incorporating the work that internet pioneers like Google and Amazon did to address the requirements of modern applications.
MongoDB is the only database that harnesses the innovations of NoSQL and maintains the foundation of relational databases – and we call this our Nexus Architecture.
Think redis, memcached or Couchbase.
Column stores you know and love, HP Vertica, Cassandra.
Rich queries, text search, geospatial, aggregation, mapreduce are types of things you can build based on the richness of the query model.