I returned from Kscope24 in Nashville last night and wanted to shared a few thoughts about the conference.
Sunday Symposiums
The conference before the conference is a great way to get a feel for the trends in the EPM space. There was much talk about AI -- more on that later. The Essbase Symposium covered Federated Partitions and the Redwood interface in Essbase 21.6. If you're a customer with a large (slow) Essbase cube that needs real-time data loading, Oracle wants to work with you to test it out with Federated Partitions. Shoot me an email and I can put you in contact with the right people. Their goal is to get 10 referenceable customers within the next year.
Sessions
The technical sessions are the heart of Kscope. I'm really just coming up to speed on the EPM Cloud side of things so those were valuable to me. I attended a great session by Harsh Dave on the Enterprise Profitability and Cost Management tool. In it I realized that I basically built the homegrown version of this 10 years ago at Sears Holdings. It also cemented my belief that ASO is superior to BSO in just about every way possible. I can't believe how many times people mentioned block creation issues -- the same thing people were talking about 25 years ago when I started with Essbase. If you're serious about Essbase performance you should at least investigate ASO.
Dodeca Customer Panel
On Tuesday we had standing room only at the Dodeca Customer Panel. In it Kroger, LexisNexis, ADT and Principal talked about how they're leveraging Dodeca to run their business. All of them are using our new EPM Cloud connector to get the most of their EPM Cloud investment.
Groovy
There were 17 sessions with Groovy either in the title or the description. I get it, you need it to do your job due to limitations in EPM Cloud but it scares the heck out of me. Let me be clear, the syntax doesn't scare me (but avoid throwing 40 lines of code in a presentation slide, please). The fact that so many companies are writing hundreds, if not thousands of lines of custom Groovy code worries me tremendously. I'm afraid Groovy is the new VBA. The backlash of managers who got burned by having to deal with unmaintainable VBA is still going on to this day.
AI
There was much discussion of AI. It's the buzzword of the day. Very little of it impacts me... yet. I'm sure it will. Similar to the ubiquitous mentions of THE CLOUD a decade ago. Eventually it took hold and I'm sure AI will too. Most of what I saw isn't ready for the real world.
Wednesday Night Event
We had a great time partying on a the General Jackson Showboat and Broadway. Kscope is a bit like drinking technical content from a firehose and the Wednesday night event is a great way to unwind. I probably ate and drank too much. Oh well...
GO!
If you were there this year, thank-you for helping making Kscope the best tech conference. If you weren't, start figuring out how you can be there next year. Start thinking of ideas for presentations. I'm available as a co-presenter if you need help. Do whatever you need to do to make sure you're in Grapevine for Kscope25.
1 comment:
Agree on Groovy. Very powerful, but way overused for tasks that can be done in the tool with no code. Companies will not be able to maintain large complex Groovy apps. Just my opinion is all :)
Post a Comment