H. Baars, and H. Kemper. Proceedings of the 14th Pacific Asia Conference on Information Systems (PACIS), page 1529-1539. Taipeh, Taiwan, (09.-12.07 2010)
Abstract
Business Intelligence (BI) deals with integrated approaches to management support. In many cases, the integrated infrastructures that are subject to BI have become complex, costly, and inflexible. A possible remedy for these issues might arise on the horizon with “Cloud Computing” concepts that promise new options for a net based sourcing of hard- and software. Currently, there is still a dearth of concepts for defining, designing, and structuring a possible adaption of Cloud Computing to the domain of BI. This contribution combines results from the outsourcing and the BI literature and derives a framework for delineating “Cloud BI” approaches. This is the bases for the discussion of six possible scenarios – some of which within immediate reach today.
%0 Conference Paper
%1 baars2010business
%A Baars, H.
%A Kemper, H.-G.
%B Proceedings of the 14th Pacific Asia Conference on Information Systems (PACIS)
%C Taipeh, Taiwan
%D 2010
%K winfo_1
%P 1529-1539
%T Business Intelligence in the Cloud?
%X Business Intelligence (BI) deals with integrated approaches to management support. In many cases, the integrated infrastructures that are subject to BI have become complex, costly, and inflexible. A possible remedy for these issues might arise on the horizon with “Cloud Computing” concepts that promise new options for a net based sourcing of hard- and software. Currently, there is still a dearth of concepts for defining, designing, and structuring a possible adaption of Cloud Computing to the domain of BI. This contribution combines results from the outsourcing and the BI literature and derives a framework for delineating “Cloud BI” approaches. This is the bases for the discussion of six possible scenarios – some of which within immediate reach today.
@inproceedings{baars2010business,
abstract = {Business Intelligence (BI) deals with integrated approaches to management support. In many cases, the integrated infrastructures that are subject to BI have become complex, costly, and inflexible. A possible remedy for these issues might arise on the horizon with “Cloud Computing” concepts that promise new options for a net based sourcing of hard- and software. Currently, there is still a dearth of concepts for defining, designing, and structuring a possible adaption of Cloud Computing to the domain of BI. This contribution combines results from the outsourcing and the BI literature and derives a framework for delineating “Cloud BI” approaches. This is the bases for the discussion of six possible scenarios – some of which within immediate reach today.},
added-at = {2018-07-18T17:04:35.000+0200},
address = {Taipeh, Taiwan},
author = {Baars, H. and Kemper, H.-G.},
biburl = {https://puma.ub.uni-stuttgart.de/bibtex/2ed388e0fa700c3f3c69bb8b6f45f2f73/infoabt7},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 14th Pacific Asia Conference on Information Systems (PACIS)},
interhash = {05f811e9c502e06a913859af315d6fea},
intrahash = {ed388e0fa700c3f3c69bb8b6f45f2f73},
keywords = {winfo_1},
language = {Englisch},
month = {09.-12.07},
pages = {1529-1539},
timestamp = {2018-07-18T15:04:35.000+0200},
title = {Business Intelligence in the Cloud?},
year = 2010
}