ETL with Azure Cookbook Practical recipes for building modern ETL solutions to load and transform data from any source
- Explore ETL and how it is different from ELT - Move and transform various data sources with Azure ETL and ELT services - Use SSIS 2019 with Azure HDInsight clusters - Discover how to query SQL Server 2019 Big Data Clusters hosted in Azure - Migrate SSIS solutions to Azure and solve key challenges associated with it - Understand why data profiling is crucial and how to implement it in Azure Databricks - Get to grips with BIML and learn how it applies to SSIS and Azure Data Factory solutions
ETL with Azure Cookbook Practical recipes for building modern ETL solutions to load and transform data from any source
- Explore ETL and how it is different from ELT - Move and transform various data sources with Azure ETL and ELT services - Use SSIS 2019 with Azure HDInsight clusters - Discover how to query SQL Server 2019 Big Data Clusters hosted in Azure - Migrate SSIS solutions to Azure and solve key challenges associated with it - Understand why data profiling is crucial and how to implement it in Azure Databricks - Get to grips with BIML and learn how it applies to SSIS and Azure Data Factory solutions
BY Python 🐍 Work With Data
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I have no inside knowledge of a potential stock listing of the popular anti-Whatsapp messaging app, Telegram. But I know this much, judging by most people I talk to, especially crypto investors, if Telegram ever went public, people would gobble it up. I know I would. I’m waiting for it. So is Sergei Sergienko, who claims he owns $800,000 of Telegram’s pre-initial coin offering (ICO) tokens. “If Telegram does a SPAC IPO, there would be demand for this issue. It would probably outstrip the interest we saw during the ICO. Why? Because as of right now Telegram looks like a liberal application that can accept anyone - right after WhatsApp and others have turn on the censorship,” he says.
The S&P 500 slumped 1.8% on Monday and Tuesday, thanks to China Evergrande, the Chinese property company that looks like it is ready to default on its more-than $300 billion in debt. Cries of the next Lehman Brothers—or maybe the next Silverado?—echoed through the canyons of Wall Street as investors prepared for the worst.