00:00 - 00:02 | I feel that version tables and audit logs are so last year |
00:02 - 00:04 | We definitely need something new.. |
00:05 - 00:06 | Real men dont do backups, they .. |
00:07 - 00:08 | So I hear, |
00:08 - 00:11 | - but what du you think about bitemporal data models? |
00:12 - 00:13 | That sounds interesting. |
00:13 - 00:16 | We're designing some new systems for base data .. |
00:16 - 00:18 | You could base it on bitemporal data structures? |
00:18 - 00:21 | Oh, but do I dont think anyone needs that, we managed without, |
00:21 - 00:25 | in the old systems. There was some field history, though. |
00:25 - 00:27 | But in was really complicated to maintain.. |
00:28 - 00:29 | I heard about bitemporality in the RADIO recently, |
00:30 - 00:33 | but I wasnt that impressed with the potential.. |
00:34 - 00:37 | .. just some extra columns added in the tables.. |
00:37 - 00:38 | Oh, but its much more, e.g. time travel .. |
00:39 - 00:41 | You can do time travel! |
00:41 - 00:44 | Time travel - in online data? |
00:44 - 00:46 | Yes, all the data from any point in time are there! |