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1.

While business intelligence (BI) entails gathering data and analyzing past, present, and
historical operations, business analysis (BA) entails using the data to identify current
obstacles, forecast future difficulties, and steer the business toward higher productivity
and a more stable future.

2. BI answers what happened, BA answers why it happened and whether it will happen
again. Because businesses frequently employ business intelligence as a first step in
making data-driven decisions.

3. Examples of big data service provider


N-iX – The Big Data service provider offers expertise in Cloud , Big Data , Data
Science, BI, DevOps, Machine Learning, Security, and many more. The N-iX Big Data
engineers work with such tools as Apache Spark, Hadoop, Snowflake, EMR,  BigQuery,
Synapse Analytics, DataFactory, DataBricks, Kafka, AWS Kinesis, Kubernetes, Redshift, Hive,
Athena, Apache Pulsar, and more.
ScienceSoft - The company is a Belorussian Big Data service provider. It employs more than
500 employees. The vendor can help you with end-to-end software development, QA, Big Data
analytics, cybersecurity, and platform-specific services, including Salesforce, Microsoft
Dynamics 365, etc. The Big Data consulting company cooperates mainly with midmarket and
enterprise clients in banking, retail, healthcare, manufacturing, telecom, and entertainment. The
vendor works with such Big Data analytics tools as Apache Hadoop, Apache Spark, Apache
Cassandra, and more. 
Fayrix - The Big Data analytics consulting company offers Big Data services, front-end
development, back-end development, and mobile application development. The vendor
cooperates primarily with small and mid-market businesses in education, healthcare, consumer
products, telecom, transportation, and energy. The Big Data service analytics consulting
company provides Big Data, Machine Learning, and predictive analytics services. It helps its
clients with Big Data consulting, high load computing, mathematical modeling, and data
management. 

4. The evolution of business analytics


Prehistoric
History suggests that the earliest humans would use sticks and stones to help predict the
sales trend of new inventions.
Industrial (1800s)
During this time, Frederick Taylor introduced the first-ever system of business analytics
in the United States of America, and he called it scientific management. The purpose of this
system was to analyze the production techniques and labourers body movements to identify
greater efficiencies.
Information age (mid-20th century)
Considering the extensive usage of data, companies started directing their efforts on
improving the speed at which the information was available. New business analytics tools were
introduced to ensure technical as well as non-technical people were able to mine the data and
gain insights.
Around this time, the increasing interconnectivity of the business world led to the need for real-
time information. This was when Google Analytics was introduced. Google wanted to provide a
free and accessible way for users to analyze their website data.
Internet age (21st century)
With the internet available to almost everyone and the increasing data, companies needed
better solutions to store and analyze all the information. Building computers with more storage
capacity and better speed wasnt possible for many, so companies resorted to using several
machines at the same time. This was the beginning of cloud computing.
Since the last decade, big data, cloud computing, and business analytics have become
integral for almost all companies. The new advancements have made these technologies even
better. Now, data analytics and science are known to be the future. From advertising and
marketing to recruiting and planning operational activities, these terms are tossed around in
every field.

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