Brad McGehee

Brad M. McGehee is a MCSE+I, MCSD, and MCT (former) with a Bachelors’ degree in Economics and a Masters in Business Administration. Currently the Director of DBA Education for Red Gate Software, Brad is an accomplished Microsoft SQL Server MVP with over 13 years’ SQL Server experience, and over 6 years’ training experience.

Brad is a frequent speaker at SQL PASS, SQL Connections, SQLTeach, SQL Saturdays, TechFests, Code Camps, SQL Server user groups, and other industry seminars, where he shares his 13 years’ cumulative knowledge.

Brad was the founder of the popular community site SQL-Server-Performance.Com, and operated it from 2000 through 2006, where he wrote over one million words on SQL Server topics.

In 2008, Brad attended 16 conferences/user group events, presented 26 sessions, and had 1,402 people attend them.

A well-respected and trusted name in SQL Server literature, Brad is the author or co-author of more than 14 technical books and over 100 published articles. His most recent books include “How to Become an Exceptional DBA,” and “Brad's Sure Guide to SQL Server 2008: The Top Ten New Features for DBAs,” and “Mastering SQL Server Profiler.”

Blogs

Dynamically Unpivot columns in SQL

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Picture this, your data ingestion team has created a table that has the sales...

Friday Basics: RPO and RTO

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I did a post last month titled RTO and RPO are myths unless you've...

A New Word: ioia

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ioia – n.the wish that you could see statistics overlaid on every person you...

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SQL Server Encrypt data into a file, send it and then decrypt

By GBeezy

First off, my apologies for what could potentially be a bad title! I am...

Table partitioning best practice

By JasonO

I've inherited a couple of rather large databases from my ex-colleague when I join...

Identifying Customer Buying Pattern in Power BI - Part 2

By Farooq Aziz

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Identifying Customer Buying Pattern in...

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Question of the Day

Finding Marks

I have marked a few transactions in my code. How can I find out which marks were stored in a transaction log?

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