Data as a Service
Encyclopedia
Data as a service, or DaaS, is a cousin of software as a service
Software as a Service
Software as a service , sometimes referred to as "on-demand software," is a software delivery model in which software and its associated data are hosted centrally and are typically accessed by users using a thin client, normally using a web browser over the Internet.SaaS has become a common...

. Like all members of the "as a Service" (aaS) family, DaaS is based on the concept that the product, data in this case, can be provided on demand to the user regardless of geographic or organizational separation of provider and consumer. Additionally, the emergence of service-oriented architecture (SOA) has rendered the actual platform on which the data resides also irrelevant. This development has enabled the recent emergence of the relatively new concept of DaaS.

Data provided as a service was at first primarily used in web mashups
Mashup (web application hybrid)
In Web development, a mashup is a Web page or application that uses and combines data, presentation or functionality from two or more sources to create new services...

, but now is being increasingly employed both commercially and, less commonly, within organisations such as the UN
United Nations
The United Nations is an international organization whose stated aims are facilitating cooperation in international law, international security, economic development, social progress, human rights, and achievement of world peace...

.

Traditionally, most enterprises have used data stored in a self-contained repository, for which software was specifically developed to access and present the data in a human-readable form. One result of this paradigm is the bundling of both the data and the software needed to interpret it into a single package, sold as a consumer product. As the number of bundled software/data packages proliferated and required interaction among one another, another layer of interface was required. These interfaces, collectively known as enterprise application integration
Enterprise application integration
Enterprise Application Integration is defined as the use of software and computer systems architectural principles to integrate a set of enterprise computer applications.- Overview :...

 (EAI), often tended to encourage vendor lock-in, as it is generally easy to integrate applications that are built upon the same foundation technology.

The result of the combined software/data consumer package and required EAI middleware has been an increased amount of software for organizations to manage and maintain, simply for the use of particular data. In addition to routine maintenance costs, a cascading amount of software updates are required as the format of the data changes. The existence of this situation contributes to the attractiveness of DaaS to data consumers because it allows for the separation of data cost and usage from that of a specific software or platform.

Benefits

Data as a Service brings the notion that data quality can happen in a centralized place, cleansing and enriching data and offering it to different systems, applications or users, irrespective of where they were in the organization or on the network. As such, Data as a Service solutions provide the following advantages:
  • Agility – Customers can move quickly due to the simplicity of the data access and the fact that they don’t need extensive knowledge of the underlying data. If customers require a slightly different data structure or has location specific requirements, the implementation is easy because the changes are minimal.
  • Cost-effectiveness – Providers can build the base with the data experts and outsource the presentation layer, which makes for very cost effective user interfaces and makes change requests at the presentation layer much more feasible.
  • Data quality – Access to the data is controlled through the data services, which tends to improve data quality because there is a single point for updates. Once those services are tested thoroughly, they only need to be regression tested if they remain unchanged for the next deployment.

Pricing models

There are hundreds of DaaS vendors on the web and the pricing models by which they charge their customers fall mainly into two major categories.
  1. Volume-based model which has two approaches:
    1. Quantity-based pricing: This is the simplest model to implement. The vendors charge their customers based on the amount of data they want to use.Subscriptions for an unlimited amount of data is referred to as the fire-hose approach.
    2. Pay per call: in this approach vendors charge for each call from the customer to the API.
  2. Data type-based model: in this model vendors charge based on the type or attribute of data that customer needs. For example, geographic, financial and historical data necessary for customer business are examples of types of data upon which pricing may be based. Some vendors such as Microsoft Azure store the data in three different types (blobs, queues and tables)


Some DaaS vendors have restrictions on subscription, such as minimum or maximum space and time (monthly or yearly).

Criticism

The drawbacks of data as a service are generally similar to those associated with any type of cloud computing
Cloud computing
Cloud computing is the delivery of computing as a service rather than a product, whereby shared resources, software, and information are provided to computers and other devices as a utility over a network ....

, such as the reliance of the customer on the service provider's ability to avoid server downtime. Specific to the DaaS model, a common criticism is that when compared to traditional data delivery, the consumer is really just "renting" the data, using it to produce a graph, chart or map, or possibly perform analysis, but generally the data is not available for download.
The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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