AquaCITY is a unified platform to manage urban water which creates a digital twin for urban water supply systems, and is used to measure, monitor, manage and plan urban water supply leveraging IoT ML and Artificial Intelligence. The platform helps monitor and optimize demand distribution, mitigate water stress, by integrating data and operations into a unified platform, and supporting planning for sustainable water supply and demand management. aquaCITY's primary…
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Oracle Utilities Meter Data Management (MDM)
Score 9.0 out of 10
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Oracle supplies a suite of utilities management applications, including the Oracle Utilities Meter Data Management (MDM) application.
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Pricing
aquaCITY
Oracle Utilities Meter Data Management (MDM)
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Pricing Offerings
aquaCITY
Oracle Utilities Meter Data Management (MDM)
Free Trial
No
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Free/Freemium Version
No
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Premium Consulting/Integration Services
No
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Entry-level Setup Fee
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Additional Details
Pricing depends on the features, users and integrations required.
Chose Oracle Utilities Meter Data Management (MDM)
Although I have minimal experience with meter data management products outside of MDM, it does perform better than an in-house product developed by our utility 20 years ago for use on our mainframe-based system then. Meter management is headed the same way as other industries …
Chose Oracle Utilities Meter Data Management (MDM)
CCB and MDM work hand in hand. MDM handles the device management area of running our business while CCB handles the actual customer side. Using a SOA tool, which provides the pathway/ connection between CCB and MDM, they are capable of updating each other with new or added …
Chose Oracle Utilities Meter Data Management (MDM)
N/A - I haven't evaluated any other kinds of software like MDM. There are lots of competitors out there but our utility is committed to Oracle at the moment so there is no need to evaluate anything else at present. If we were to start looking elsewhere, one of the key areas I …
Oracle Meter Data Management is very well suited for exactly what its called, Data Management. It stores our data accurately and historically in the database and does a good job of signaling errors if and when incorrect data, or what is perceived to be incorrect data is found. You can check on the history of meters and other devices, whether that be location, data, readings, voltage, usage, etc... I would say MDM would not be as well suited for the Customer Information data management. Although you can find some of this in MDM, it is not built for this type of usage.
Integration-wise, MDM is flawless with CCB, but the amount of time it takes to load and interpret daily reads is nearly prohibitive. Through a process called "meter interrogation," Oracle is supposed to process initial reads into final measurements. This is supposed to run three times a day, but because the process is so resource-intensive, we are only able to run it barely twice a day. Production resources lag during this time and user experience is reduced.
The amount of data the MDM require to be kept in just two of the thousands of database tables indicates a very poor design, or at least a poor integration of the Lodestar product that they purchased and turned into MDM. The initial measurements and final measurements tables take up around 85 to 90 percent of the database. This bloatedness in database size translates into slower performance for the front-end user as well as real costs in terms of data storage. Any user using Oracle's Exadata software will pay dearly for not having a purge and archive strategy.
I feel the overall support has been great, oracle employees are easy to work with, quick to answer, and very knowledgeable. If they don't have an answer for support you might need, they are eager to find the right path to get the solution.
Although I have minimal experience with meter data management products outside of MDM, it does perform better than an in-house product developed by our utility 20 years ago for use on our mainframe-based system then. Meter management is headed the same way as other industries in terms of data usage and mining. The requirement for data is only going to continue to increase, and at this time it appears that MDM is only just keeping up with those requirements. Oracle has done a great job of purchasing products and integrating them into their overall framework, but the current database structure of MDM lends itself to poor performance if Oracle's own hardware is not purchased, and if their purge and archive strategy (i.e. ILM) is not employed.