Not really as MDM isn't about the full model its about the core and
identifying duplicates and commonalities.  So for "Person" for instance it
might only be 25 attributes that are used by MDM to do that.  The other 300+
attributes that exist around the enterprise aren't included within the MDM
model.

Steve


On 23 June 2010 01:37, Dennis Djenfer <[email protected]> wrote:

>
>
> Steve,
>
> In your blog you write:
>
> "The only sensible policy is to look at an "active" MDM strategy and a
> brokerage approach to communication between systems ideally based around a
> federated data strategy that leaves information its its source systems but
> provides references between them."
>
> Where does the data model for the active MDM strategy and brokerage
> approach come from? Isn't that the same model as you would use for buidling
> a canonical data model?
>
>
> // Dennis Djenfer
>
>
>
> On 2010-06-22 11:34, Steve Jones wrote:
>
> Short answer... don't.
>
>  Longer answer
> http://service-architecture.blogspot.com/search?q=SOA+canonical
>
> On 21 June 2010 13:26, <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> Hello all.
>>
>> I have a question for the design of a canonical data model.
>>
>> The issue is that I want to create a data services layer, and for making
>> the design of services that expose data, first I want to create the
>> canonical data model, which allows me to properly design services, and I
>> want to know if this canonical data model should correspond to the data
>> model of the database, E / R model , or I just model the information
>> concepts that are handled in the database.
>>
>> Jorge.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>    
>

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