Editorial
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112 results found for Editorial, displaying items 1 - 20
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Browser Wars Redux
The Google Chrome browser presents a challenge both Microsoft Internet Explorer (IE) and to SQL Server web application development.
SQL Server Magazine
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Michael Otey
SQL Server 2008: Which Edition’s Right for You?
How can you help your organization choose the edition of SQL Server 2008 it needs? Michael Otey takes a quick tour through the options that are available.
SQL Server Magazine
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Michael Otey
Demystifying SQL Server Virtualization
Michael Otey dispels some myths surrounding SQL Server virtualization, including the notion that all virtualization platforms are created equal. He explains the high-level differences between the hosted, hypervisor, and virtualized OS platforms.
SQL Server Magazine
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Michael Otey
Migrating to SQL Server 2008
Now that Microsoft supports direct migration from SQL Server 2000 to SQL Server 2008, you must decide: Should I migrate from SQL Server 2000 to SQL Server 2005, or should I migrate directly to SQL Server 2008?
SQL Server Magazine
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Michael Otey
Virtualizing SQL Server with VMware or Hyper-V
Tests of server virtualization products VMware ESX Server 3.5 and Windows Server 2008 Hyper-V, plus SQL Server running four virtual machines (VMs) indicate that SQL Server running in a VM is ready to handle production workloads.
SQL Server Magazine
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Michael Otey
What Readers Want SQL Server to Include
Take a look at which features our readers believe should be in the next version of SQL Server.
SQL Server Magazine
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Michael Otey
What If You Had a Benchmark and Nobody Came?
Michael looks at some of SQL Server 2008's benchmark scores and discusses why the TPC-E benchmark currently isn't useful for comparing database platforms.
SQL Server Magazine
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Michael Otey
SQL Server 2008's Report Designer Preview
This week, Derek discusses the Report Designer Preview feature that will be included with SQL Server 2008.
SQL Server Magazine
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Derek Comingore
MySQL: Sun's Billion Dollar Baby
Find out how Sun Technologies' acquisition of MySQL means for the database market.
SQL Server Magazine
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Michael Otey
Ready for Your Environment? Working with VLDB Using SQL Server 2008
SQL Server Magazine
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Randy Dyess
How Do I upgrade to SQL Server 2008?
SQL Server Magazine
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Randy Dyess
What's New in SQL Server 2008?
SQL Server Magazine
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Editors
VMs vs. Multiple SQL Server Instances, Round 2
Choose which server consolidation method is right for you. Mike Otey walks you through factors to consider for your organization.
SQL Server Magazine
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Michael Otey
Where SQL Server Should Go from Here
Find out what Michael says is missing from SQL Server 2008 and what Microsoft should include in its next release.
SQL Server Magazine
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Michael Otey
SQL Server as a Data Platform . . . Finally
SQL Server 2008 can serve both your business needs and your infrastructure needs--that is, if you're even ready to migrate to it.
SQL Server Magazine
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Michael Otey
VMs vs. Multiple SQL Server Instances
Many organizations have adopted running multiple VMs on a single hardware platform as a server consolidation method, but virtualization isn’t the only solution. Find out how virtualization and multiple SQL server instances compare.
SQL Server Magazine
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Michael Otey
New Training Grounds
Microsoft's new MODL training is where Second Life meets traditional classroom training. The result: an entirely new training environment that provides a fun, life-like training program that you can follow at your own pace.
SQL Server Magazine
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Michael Otey
A Fresh Approach to SQL Server
We've redesigned SQL Server Magazine to sharpen our focus on content you want, such as business intelligence and SQL Server fundamentals, and to make it easier for you to read, interact with the community, and find related content on the Web.
SQL Server Magazine
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Karen Forster
Get Connected with LINQ
Language-Integrated Query (LINQ) is the long-awaited wave of the future, and its benefits definitely outweigh its drawbacks.
SQL Server Magazine
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Michael Otey
Too Soon for SQL Server 2008?
Believe it or not, the next release of SQL Server—SQL Server 2008—is right around the corner. But releases aren't necessarily good news for customers.
SQL Server Magazine
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Michael Otey
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