Mar

20th

Developing and designing databases

Uncategorized


Developing and designing databases has assumed a critical and specialized task status in any business today. But to add an edge to this specialized job Paladin Consultants, LLC is at your service providing a simplified yet highly effective database management solutions for your business. We operate extensively in database design in New Jersey and New York CityDatabases are developed differently according to the nature of the business. Their constituents vary as per client requirement and the type of data to be classified, categorized and stored. Database development involves modeling data that can contain several hundred variables. We have special expertise owing to our experience, keen understanding of the business modeling process and market trend research. We use sophisticated mainframe database such as DB2, and RDB, and database managers such as SQL Server, MySQL, Informix, FoxPro, as well as Microsoft Access and Oracle to ensure that the output delivered conforms to client satisfaction..

We deal in all phases of database projects viz. planning data-modeling, interface design, web and client-server, workflow and user analysis, capacity strategy, implementation, migration of legacy systems and data, post-implementation review that extends to a broad cross-section of business applications like e-Business, client relationship management (CRM), sales and Marketing, accounting and budgeting, modeling and forecasting, finance and markets, quality control and messaging, et al. For details on database design NYC, Database Development NJ, visit www.paladn.com

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2 Responses to “Developing and designing databases”

  1. Does anyone know if there is another language or set of commands beside SQL for talking with databases?

    I’m working on a project and am doing some research thanks

  2. Well there are different types of databases – hierarchical and relational, for starters. For the relational db, the lingua franca are several variants of sql (MS, of course has its own ‘more developed’ sql which, as usual, is non standard)

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