SQL Server Central is supported by Red Gate Software Ltd.
 
Log in  ::  Register  ::  Not logged in
Search:  
 
 

Day 2 of TechEd

By Brian Knight, 2005/06/08

Total article views: 5035 | Views in the last 30 days: 0
It’s official! The countdown to SQL Server 2005, Visual Studio 2005 and BizTalk 2006 has begun. All three products will be launched officially on the week of November 7th, 2005 (yes, 2005!). You can go to http://msdn.microsoft.com/launch2005 for more information. During Paul Flessner’s keynote speech this morning, he announced the launch date and that you can now download the latest CTP (Community Technology Preview) on MSDN or betaplace. The latest CTP is feature complete and is the equivalent of Beta 3 for SQL Server. From here forward, you should be able to upgrade from CTP to CTP without having to uninstall and reinstall.

Other big news in this mornings keynote was that Reporting Services will be shipped in all releases other than SQL Express. Also, the ad-hoc reporting tool called Report Builder will be shipped with Standard Edition as well. Previously this was only in Enterprise Edition.

New SQL Server 2005 benchmarks were also announced this morning. In the coveted TPC-C benchmark, SQL Server 2005 has experienced a 17% lower cost and 37% better performance over SQL Server 2000. In the TPC-H benchmark, which is more applicable to data warehouses, SQL Server experienced 162% better performance and 54% lower cost. In the constant Oracle vs. SQL Server battle, SQL Server had 7% better performance and 37% lower cost than Oracle in the TPC-C benchmark. In the TPC-H there was a 35% better performance and 20% lower cost to Oracle. In other news, Paul Flessner mentioned the SQL Server Migration Assistant, which allows you to migrate easily from Oracle. The conversion kit simplifies the manual effort of the conversion by 80% or more.

I went to many more sessions today but the most compelling was Visual Studio 2005 Team Services. This will have to be a huge series of articles, as it’s a huge feature. Essentially, Microsoft now performs all the change management, testing, test-driven development and load testing for you based on your role. My mouth was open half the presentation thinking “Wow!”.

By Brian Knight, 2005/06/08

Total article views: 5035 | Views in the last 30 days: 0
Your response
 
 
Related tags

Other    
SQLServerCentral.com    
 
Already registered?  

Free registration required

To read the rest of this article, and access thousands of other articles, we ask you to register on the site and subscribe to our newsletters.

Register

E-mail address:
Password:
Password (confirm):

  

Subscriptions

We ask you to register on the site and subscribe to our newsletters. Subscribing to our newsletters gets you:

  • ALL of our content (thousands of articles, scripts, and forum postings)
  • A daily newsletter (example)
  • A weekly news round up (example)
  • The opportunity to ask and answer questions in our forums
  • A daily Question of the Day to test and help you increase your knowledge of SQL Server.

We ask that you give the newsletter a try for a week. Over 200,000 SQL Server Professionals a day find it entertaining and useful. If not, you are welcome to unsubscribe at anytime.

Steve Jones
Editor, SQLServerCentral.com