Tony Schmidt wrote:

So do you think it would be very beneficial for me to start with an
Inman or Kimball book?  Or do you think it would be just leisure
reading and not very practical at best - fill my head with needless
jargon and inflexible dogmas, at worst?

You have an unique opportunity here ;-)
I would recommend that you start by writing down what you want and how it should look like, don't be bothered yet with implementation details like how tables should be organised, just how you want to access your data for the end-result.

Than make a detailed list of caveats which you can already see; security, distribution, centralisation, real-time sync, etc.

Use that list, go to a tech library and flick through all the books and look for signs that they actually have a solution for your problems, read those books and take the things that make sense.

After you done this a couple of times you should see some patterns starting to form and see that some solutions which you used in the past, although working are better handled differently. But the main thing is that you should have something working, which is the proof of the pudding.

<cut rest>
--
MPH
http://blog.dcuktec.com
'If consumed, best digested with added seasoning to own preference.'
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list

Reply via email to