Posts by : Sean Lynch
A Deep Dive into Polaris: Simplifying Iceberg Catalog Management
12 September 2024
Explore how Polaris simplifies Iceberg catalog management with enhanced cross-compatibility and unique features for Snowflake users and beyond.
Using Managed Iceberg Tables to Build a Datalake Inside Snowflake
12 September 2024
Discover how to leverage Snowflake's Managed Iceberg Tables to efficiently build and manage a datalake, integrating seamlessly with external object storage.
Apache Iceberg 101: The Table Format Reshaping Data Lakes
4 September 2024
Learn why Apache Iceberg separation of storage and compute is revolutionizing data architecture.
Using SQL to create segments based on geo locations
30 August 2024
Census Audience Hub is built from the ground up to run on your data warehouse, so you can directly write SQL to create segments in addition to using the UI
Introducing the Universal Data Platform
23 July 2024
The universal data platform allows teams to activate, transform, and govern trusted data - internally and externally.
Introducing Embedded Reverse ETL Syncs, the future of SaaS integrations
22 May 2024
The ability to embed Census's best-in-class Reverse ETL sync UI into any application helps companies share data with external customers and rapidly ship & maintain integrations
Keeping Data Private with the Composable CDP
5 April 2024
Composing a CDP on your data warehouse benefits from richer privacy, security, and governance controls
Sync data 100x faster on Snowflake with Census Live Syncs
27 March 2024
Announcing the fastest-ever data activation on Snowflake, 100x faster and 100x cheaper than traditional Reverse ETL
Architecting Multi-tenant Data Integrations with Census Embedded
12 January 2024
Maintaining data isolation is critical in building multi-tenant applications. Use Census Embedded and your Data Warehouse to build multi-tenant integrations.
NoSQL isn't dead, but it left a lasting legacy | Census
19 April 2023
Once upon a time, NoSQL databases like MongoDB took the tech world by storm. Fast forward to today, and the hype surrounding NoSQL has leveled off. So... what did they leave in their place?