Yesterday, Simba officially announced our suite of. Every time I go to a Big Data conference like O’Reilly Strata or Hadoop Summit, I see a plethora of Macs. It seems that a lot of Data Scientists use Macs. In fact, Tableau, which seems to be the BI tool of choice in the Big Data space is soon coming out with a. Microsoft Excel on the Mac is also quite popular and many of us have wondered when Microsoft will come out with a full version of Pivot Tables on Mac Excel. The Simba ODBC drivers on the Mac include Hive, HBase, Cassandra, and MongoDB. Some of these drivers are already in production like the Hive Mac ODBC driver we have with Hortonworks.
Hortonworks has put together some good resources around this driver including this tutorial document: ““. If you are using HDP, you can download the Hive Mac ODBC driver here:. Alternatively, you can go to the Simba website and get access to all the. Some of the Mac ODBC drivers are in Beta so if you can’t find the one you want, please email us: solutions at Simba dot com and we can get you set up quite quickly. All of the Simba Mac ODBC drivers are based on the. SimbaEngine ODBC SDK is the core tool that Simba uses to build all of our drivers.
SimbaEngine ODBC SDK is also the tool used by many database companies to build their own ODBC drivers. So, if there is an ODBC driver that you need but can’t find, we can easily build it using SimbaEngine. The advantage of SimbaEngine is that it is fully cross platform. This means SimbaEngine supports Mac, Windows, Linux, Solaris, AIX, and HP/UX.
ODBC driver for MySQL Multi-Tier (Enterprise Edition) Oracle; ODBC driver for Oracle Single-Tier (Express Edition). About OpenLink Universal Data Access. To provide database-specific configuration dialogs and performance optimizations which are not deliverable through the generic Lite Edition ODBC–JDBC Bridge packaging. However, these.
Therefore, an ODBC driver built using SimbaEngine can be deployed on any operating system. Post navigation. Simba is the industry choice for standards-based data access and analytics solutions, and for innovation in data connectivity. Our reputation as the connectivity pioneer means we’re the preferred partner for SDKs – ODBC, JDBC, OLE DB for OLAP (ODBO) and XML for Analysis (XMLA) – and our technology is embedded into today’s most popular BI and analytics applications.
A subsidiary of Magnitude Software, the unified data application management leader, Simba provides connectivity solutions that are pivotal to the vast operational efficiencies delivered by the Magnitude portfolio of products.
About OpenLink Universal Data Access Secure and High-Performance Drivers for ODBC, JDBC, ADO.NET, OLE DB, and XMLA In today’s hyperconnected data-driven economy, your ability to access, transform, contextualize and distribute data affects the outcome of all your digital transformation pursuits aimed at improving both enterprise and individual agility. The technology that enables you to store, access and disseminate data across the enterprise is of timeless value. What are Data Access Drivers (or Connectors)?
Data Access Drivers (or Connectors) are the technology that sits between business solutions and data management applications. This kind of technology, commonly referred to as Data-Access Middleware, profoundly impacts any organization’s ability to improve and sustain agility through data access, transformation, and dissemination. Fundamentally, Data Access Middleware is based on open standards, to ensure a loose-coupling between front-end solutions and the back-end data management services from which data is retrieved. Open standards associated with Data Access Middleware include ODBC (Open Database Connectivity), JDBC (Java Database Connectivity), ADO.NET (ActiveX Data Objects for.NET), OLE DB (Object Linking & Embedding for Databases), and XMLA (XML for Analysis). What are OpenLink Data Access Drivers? Our collection of secure, high-performance, open-standards-compliant ODBC, JDBC, ADO.NET, OLE DB, and XMLA drivers (connectors) is commercially packaged as the suite of OpenLink Universal Data Access (UDA) Drivers. These drivers are available in three main forms: Express Edition (Single-Tier) Drivers (ODBC only) Our Express Edition is an easy to deploy, DBMS-specific packaging of our Lite Edition ODBC Driver for JDBC Data Sources (our Lite Edition ODBC–JDBC Bridge), bundled with a database-specific JDBC driver.
This packaging allows us to provide database-specific configuration dialogs and performance optimizations which are not deliverable through the generic Lite Edition ODBC–JDBC Bridge packaging. However, these drivers are dependent upon and limited by the third-party JDBC driver and the local Java environment. Our Express Edition drivers today! Lite Edition (Single-Tier) Drivers (ODBC, JDBC, ADO.NET, OLE DB, and XMLA) Our entry-level Lite Edition ODBC drivers leverage database-specific networking (provided by each target database backend) for high-performance remote database connectivity.
There are also Lite Edition Bridge Drivers, enabling ODBC applications to connect to JDBC Data sources; and enabling JDBC, ADO.NET, XMLA, and/or OLE DB applications to connect to ODBC Data Sources. Our Multi-Tier Edition drivers today! What Benefits does OpenLink Data Access provide? OpenLink UDA ensures that your data assets remain yours to exploit in the manner that best serves the digital business needs of your organization.
You are empowered with the freedom to mix and match best-of-class IT infrastructure components without vendor lock-in at the operating system, programming language, application server, or database level. Vendor lock-in at any of these levels ultimately impedes enterprise agility. Which Data Access Standards Are Supported? Our support of open standards for data access includes the following:. (Open Database Connectivity).
(Java Database Connectivity). (ActiveX Data Objects for.NET). (Object Linking & Embedding for Databases). (XML for Analysis) What Databases Engines Are Supported? This HTML5 document contains 12 embedded RDF statements represented using HTML+Microdata notation. The embedded RDF content will be recognized by any processor of HTML5 Microdata. Prefix Namespace IRI n7 schema n4 n5 n2 rdf n6 n9 xsdh n8 http://uda.openlinksw.com/odbc/.