02809cam a22002778a 4500991004112529707536 9780824830137 (hardcover : alk. paper)b13803323-39ule_instDip.to Filologia Ling. e Lett.ita952/.01Adolphson, Mikael629623Heian Japan, centers and peripheries /Mikael Adolphson, Edward Kamens, and Stacie Matsumoto, editorsHonolulu :University of Hawai'i Press,2007x, 450 p. :ill. ;23 cm.Include bibliografia e indiceBetween and beyond centers and peripheries / Mikael S. Adolphson and Edward Kamens -- Part I: Locating political centers and peripheries -- From female sovereign to mother of the nation: women and government in the Heian period / Fukutåo Sanae -- Court and provinces under Regent Fujiwara no Tadahira / Joan R. Piggott -- Kugyåo and zuryåo: center and periphery in the era of Fujiwara no Michinaga / G. Cameron Hurst - Part III: Shifting categories in literature and arts -- The way of the literati: Chinese learning and poetry in mid-Heian Japan / Ivo Smits -- Terrains of text in mid-Heian court culture / Edward Kamens -- The Buddhist transformation of Japan in the ninth century: the case of Eleven-Headed Kannon / Samuel Morse -- Part III: Establishing new religious spheres -- Scholasticism, exegesis, and ritual practice: on revolution in the history of Buddhist writing in the early Heian period / Ryåuichi Abe -- Institutional diversity and religious integration: the establishment of temple networks in the Heian age / Mikael Adolphson -- The archeology of anxiety: an underground history of Heian religion / Max moerman -- Part IV: Negotiating domestic peripheries -- Climate, farming, and famine in japan, 670-1100 / Wayne Farris -- Life of commoners in the provinces; the Owari no Kuni Gebumi of 988 / Charlotte von Verschuer -- Lordship interdicted: Taira no Tadatsune and the limited horizons of warrior ambition / Karl Friday -- Part V: Placing Heian Japan in the Asian world -- Cross-border traffic on the Kyushu coast, 794-1086 / Bruce Batten -- Jåojin's travels from center to center (with some periphery in between) -- Robert Borgen.GiapponeStoriaHeian period, 794-1185.Kamens, Edward,authorhttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/aut644549Matsumoto, Stacie.b1380332302-04-1421-01-09991004112529707536LE008 FL.M. (Giapp.) IV A 1412008000453107le008-E0.00-l- 00000.i1491928x21-01-09Heian Japan, centers and peripheries1465003UNISALENTOle00821-01-09ma -enghiu0004345nam 22005055 450 991025485160332120200703101241.09781484227220148422722010.1007/978-1-4842-2722-0(CKB)3710000001151518(DE-He213)978-1-4842-2722-0(MiAaPQ)EBC4838267(CaSebORM)9781484227213(PPN)200515012(OCoLC)984829371(OCoLC)ocn984829371(EXLCZ)99371000000115151820170407d2017 u| 0engurnn|008mamaatxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierUsage-Driven Database Design From Logical Data Modeling through Physical Schema Definition /by George Tillmann1st ed. 2017.Berkeley, CA :Apress :Imprint: Apress,2017.1 online resource (XXIV, 374 p. 143 illus., 16 illus. in color.)Includes index.9781484227213 1484227212 Part I: Introduction -- 1. Introduction to Usage-Driven Database Design -- Part II: Logical Data Modeling -- 2. The E-R Approach -- 3. More About the E-R Approach -- 4. Building the Logical Data Model -- 5. LDM Best Practices -- 6. LDM Pitfalls -- 7. LDM Perils to Watch For -- Part III: Physical Schema Definition -- 8. Introduction to Physical Database Design -- 9. Introduction to Physical Schema Definition -- 10. Transformation: Creating the Physical Data Model.-11. Utilization: Merging Data and Process.-12. Formalization: Creating a Schema -- 13. Customization: Enhancing Performance -- 14. The Data Warehouse -- 15. The Big Data Decision Support System -- Part IV: Where From Here? -- 16. A Look Ahead -- Part V: Appendixes -- 17: Appendix A: Glossary -- 18: Appendix B: Logical Data Modeling Definitions -- 19. Appendix C: Physical Schema Definition Object Definitions -- 20. Appendix D: Formulas Used in the Book -- 21. Appendix E: List of U3D Deliverables.Design great databases—from logical data modeling through physical schema definition. You will learn a framework that finally cracks the problem of merging data and process models into a meaningful and unified design that accounts for how data is actually used in production systems. Key to the framework is a method for taking the logical data model that is a static look at the definition of the data, and merging that static look with the process models describing how the data will be used in actual practice once a given system is implemented. The approach solves the disconnect between the static definition of data in the logical data model and the dynamic flow of the data in the logical process models. The design framework in this book can be used to create operational databases for transaction processing systems, or for data warehouses in support of decision support systems. The information manager can be a flat file, Oracle Database, IMS, NoSQL, Cassandra, Hadoop, or any other DBMS. Usage-Driven Database Design emphasizes practical aspects of design, and speaks to what works, what doesn’t work, and what to avoid at all costs. Included in the book are lessons learned by the author over his 30+ years in the corporate trenches. Everything in the book is grounded on good theory, yet demonstrates a professional and pragmatic approach to design that can come only from decades of experience. Presents an end-to-end framework from logical data modeling through physical schema definition. Includes lessons learned, techniques, and tricks that can turn a database disaster into a success. Applies to all types of database management systems, including NoSQL such as Cassandra and Hadoop, and mainstream SQL databases such as Oracle and SQL Server.Database managementDatabase Managementhttps://scigraph.springernature.com/ontologies/product-market-codes/I18024Database management.Database Management.005.74Tillmann Georgeauthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/aut859265UMIUMIBOOK9910254851603321Usage-Driven Database Design1917785UNINA