BusinessObjects XI Release 2 For Dummies (For Dummies (Computer/Tech)) | 
enlarge | Authors: Derek Torres, Stuart Mudie, Julie Albaret Publisher: For Dummies Category: Book
List Price: $29.99 Buy New: $15.45 You Save: $14.54 (48%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 168699
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 344 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 7.3 x 0.9
ISBN: 0470181125 Dewey Decimal Number: 005.756 EAN: 9780470181126 ASIN: 0470181125
Publication Date: April 28, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: Brand new. We ship daily.
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description BusinessObjects may seem like a dauntingly complex topic, but BusinessObjects XI Release 2 For Dummies makes is a snap. Even if you're new to business intelligence tools, this user-friendly guide makes it easy to access, format and share data, analyze the information this data contains, and measure your organization’s performance. In no time, you'll be finding your way around Universes to see how everything is shaping up, viewing and creating reports, building powerful queries on your organizations database, and measuring your company's performance using BusinessObjects XI Release 2. This completely jargon-free handbook will put you in complete control of the ways and means of a truly exciting and powerful suite of business intelligence tools. Discover how to: - Make business decisions with help from BusinessObjects
- Use BusinessObjects XI wizards
- Perform a server installation
- Create and define a Universe
- Set up desktop reporting
- Customize and use InfoView
- Measure performance with Dashboard and Analytics
- Take advantage of data marts and understand how they fit into your BusinessObjects system
Created by a team with more than 15 years combined experience working with BusinessObjects tools, BusinessObjects XI Release 2 For Dummies comes complete with several short lists of useful information, including tips on how to prepare for a successful BusinessObjects integration and helpful resources beyond the pages of this book. You'll also find an overview of Crystal Reports, BusinessObjects’ companion reporting tool.
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| Customer Reviews:
Worst software book ever? May 29, 2008 4 out of 7 found this review helpful
After reading through page 270, save for the administration chapter, and then getting a look at Cindi Howson's "Business Objects XI -- The Complete Reference", I can tell you without any reservation whatsoever: save your time and money.
It is immediately and abundantly clear to me that Howson's book has much, much more of the information I, and probably you, really want. Read the bad reviews for that book, and know that this one is much worse.
As for this book:
Conceptually weak and sloppy; badly organized; barely edited.
Almost entirely a tour of the user interface with almost no depth---no ongoing examples, no case studies, and little sense of work-flow.
Favors scattered repetition over a more organized, in-depth conceptual framework, i.e. details of some features are spread throughout the text, often with repetition. If you want to know about a particular feature, there's no single place you can go to learn all the important things about it. Using the index, you'll have to wade through the repetition to get the all the info you need. But again, all you learn about is the UI, not anything about why, when, or whether.
And it's not even a high quality tour of the UI: Amazingly inefficient use of screenshots: repeating very simple images; failing to give complete detail in most others (e.g. labeling nothing at all or only a single button in a full toolbar image); referring to an icon by color when all the images are b&w; long sequences of steps with only a single UI image; needlessly truncated images ... and so on!
Bad humor, seriously misleading metaphors and analogies.
Bizarre use of subordinate clauses (e.g. Whether you know it or not, ...... is extremely important. Well, I guess I know it now...)
One example: makes a solid effort at disambiguating documents and reports, but then immediately uses the terms so utterly interchangeably as to foster much confusion, and lead me to conclude that the authors themselves must not be fully clear on the distinction in actual practice.
A savvy computer user would almost certainly better use their time just cruising through the user interface, spot checking the help files, with perhaps a short Q&A with another user every once in a while.
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