"The more things change, the more they stay the same" - Jean-Baptiste Alphonse Karr
In the late 1980s, "executive dashboards" were all the rage. Vendors were selling tools to tap data in mainframe databases to provide insights directly to execs to improve business knowledge. It generally felt like a massive waste of resources.
(But, in that timeframe, I did build a tool to scrape data from a mainframe DB and turn it into useful statistics on a weekly basis at a big organization. Not sure how long it lasted, though, because my boss required that the reporting interface be implemented in his favorite tool, Lotus 1-2-3.)
(edited for spelling)
In the late 1980s, "executive dashboards" were all the rage. Vendors were selling tools to tap data in mainframe databases to provide insights directly to execs to improve business knowledge. It generally felt like a massive waste of resources.
(But, in that timeframe, I did build a tool to scrape data from a mainframe DB and turn it into useful statistics on a weekly basis at a big organization. Not sure how long it lasted, though, because my boss required that the reporting interface be implemented in his favorite tool, Lotus 1-2-3.) (edited for spelling)