Very intuitive way to explaining things. it will help data people to remember this by the shop example. teaching by example is the only way to teach effectively.
Very nice explanation. Really interesting facts and explanation . Easy to understand and remember. You really make IT interesting as you say. This is not only for this - rather for all your videos . Thanks a lot for spreading knowledge .
Thank you for the video! I’d like to also put forward document-based db’s like MongoDB as as a sweet spot between traditional RDBMS and NoSQL db’s (like the wide-column store you described in the denormalized scenario). Mongo data models are typically more denormalized than not, and it can ingest millions of writes/sec without issue
Is Normalized = better write performance De-Normalized = better read performance always true or a rule of thumb? So, I have been exploring efficiency increases in normalizing sometimes due to better indexing performance. Is it possible to actually increase read efficiency by normalizing and allowing better indexing?
sir meinay ek banday ka mobaile apnay wifi say connect kia hay ab wo appna mobaile hotspot on kar kay dosro ko internet deta hay .mein cahta hon wo net istemal karay leken hotspot kam nakaray. is ka koye settings ho to mera help karay. mehrobani hoge
I may not have money to donate but I will not skip ads for every video i watch in your channel. Great video! 😊
Thanks Marky that means a lot man thankyou 🙏🙏☺️
Nice Explanantion i have learnt about DATA ENGINEERING by watching your videos, I truly appreciate your work...Keep Making Videos!!!!!
Very intuitive way to explaining things. it will help data people to remember this by the shop example. teaching by example is the only way to teach effectively.
Very nice explanation. Really interesting facts and explanation . Easy to understand and remember. You really make IT interesting as you say. This is not only for this - rather for all your videos . Thanks a lot for spreading knowledge .
Awesome video
Thank you for this video. Simple and Easy to follow!
Superb🙏
Thank you for the video! I’d like to also put forward document-based db’s like MongoDB as as a sweet spot between traditional RDBMS and NoSQL db’s (like the wide-column store you described in the denormalized scenario). Mongo data models are typically more denormalized than not, and it can ingest millions of writes/sec without issue
Until you have to ingest all that deeply nested crap into a relational database
Great video 🤙🏽
Very well explained, thank you.
Great video!!
Brilliantly explained
Nice Explain Sir, Thank You
Great video I’ve been watching for a while and I’ve learnt so much thanks a lot your a amazing teacher never stop
nice explanation sir...
Is Normalized = better write performance
De-Normalized = better read performance
always true or a rule of thumb?
So, I have been exploring efficiency increases in normalizing sometimes due to better indexing performance. Is it possible to actually increase read efficiency by normalizing and allowing better indexing?
great video thank you
👌👌👌
👏👏👏
Thank you buddy ..... 😊
Thanks 😊
finished watching
thannks man
well explained Sir..Thank you..
thanks
This is great, thank you very much
Thanks
Thank you for this clear explanation.
Thanks
sir meinay ek banday ka mobaile apnay wifi say connect kia hay ab wo appna mobaile hotspot on kar kay dosro ko internet deta hay .mein cahta hon wo net istemal karay leken hotspot kam nakaray. is ka koye settings ho to mera help karay. mehrobani hoge
New fan. I like your style.
Thanks Sidney
Good stuff for beginners, obviously every aspect could not be covered in a limited timeframe.
Sir, why is write easy in a Normalized DB? Any example, pls? Thanks for your video. 🙏
Read this 👉 link.medium.com/K7ivyOiTsxb
Can we say Denormalization process is followed by normalization ? Instea of which is better
AMAZON DB2 --- Best example for DENORMALIZATION Data
Can you pls explain SDWAN concepr
thanks for suggestion
Topic starts from 1:28
Video starts at @1:08