>We have a new datawarehouse project. I didn't involve in this project at
>beginning. Right now, I was assigned to the group for picking a front
>end reporting tool. So far I know the manager prefer brio, cognos and
>business intelligent product.
>
>Does anyone familiar with those tools? Can you give me some feedback as
>dba standpoint of view, like how report distributed, power user vs end
>user, performance and security advange or disadvantage, concerns?

Me! Me! Pick me!  (Oooh, a topic I can answer! :-)

If your manager likes Brio, then that is a plus.  Brio is a good product for any 
reporting from simple to moderately complex.  I've used it extensively and have always 
been impressed with how it is able to tackle tasks that seem to be out of their area 
of comfort.  The tool has a nice Portal-like ability that uses JavaScript internally 
to allow fairly complex customization.  They also have options for distributed 
reporting, push-vs-pull reporting, etc.  About the only negative I've seen with Brio 
is that they locally cache the hypercube.  Thus if you want your hypercube to be 
refreshed automatically, you either need their push technology or a different product. 
 If that doesn't matter to you (and in fact, many see that as a plus, since it makes 
for easy static snapshots), then it works great.  Obviously, their thin-client version 
does not store the hypercube locally.  It may store it on the server, I'm not sure.  
Their pricing is "okay", and they do barter for lower prices.

As somone already pointed out, Business Objects is also a good choice for moderate to 
complex projects.  In my mind, the biggest problem with BO is that it takes sooo long 
to get going with their stuff.  You can get a simple portal up and going with a couple 
reports in Brio in a few days, without ever having touched their product before.  Try 
that in BO and you'll be there for at least double the time.  On the positive side, 
once you get proficient, BO scales a lot better, and can handle just about any 
reporting/DW needs you'll ever have.  Price is about the same, and they too barter.

Crystal Analysis is definitely the price-point winner, and a lot of people know how to 
use Crystal Reports, so it makes getting skilled labor easier.  Their product is 
definitely not as capable at the moderate-to-complex end, but for simple reporting 
it's about as easy as it comes.  I've just never been able to trust Seagate all that 
much.  They change their product names and offerings almost yearly, they don't give 
any warm fuzzies for continued existence of their products, and their pricing is 
haphazard and at the whim of whatever sales person you talk to.  I hate that.  Don't 
even ask me about the whole Crystal Info debacle or I'm going to get mad. ;-)

As a side note, I like (and have chosen) Sagent for data warehousing.  It's more than 
just a reporting tool, since it does the ETL side of things, schema operations, 
automation, Portal-like functions, etc.  But it's very powerful and blows the socks 
off of any piecemeal collection of software that does the same thing.  And lest we 
forget, Sagent used to be the engine for Oracle's data warehousing solution as 
recently as two years ago, so even Oracle thinks highly of them.

One last thought: if TWDI has a conference coming up in your area, it's worth going to 
if you can get there.  One of the presenters goes through a terrific in-depth 
evaluation of all the data warehousing tools on the market, including reporting tools. 
 Some say it's worth the cost of the conference in what you save buying products.

Anyhow, hope that helps.

thanks,
bruce

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