SQL MCM Training – Day 1
Today was my first day of SQL MCM training here in Bellevue. We started at 08:30am
and now (05:30pm) Kimberly is...
2011-08-09
1,691 reads
Today was my first day of SQL MCM training here in Bellevue. We started at 08:30am
and now (05:30pm) Kimberly is...
2011-08-09
1,691 reads
For the next 3 weeks I'm in Bellevue/WA for the SQL MCM training provided by Paul
Randal, Kimberly Tripp, and Bob...
2011-08-08
640 reads
Since today its official, I'm presenting 2 sessions at the SQLbits conference in Liverpool
(http://www.sqlbits.com) from September 30 –
October 1. Here...
2011-08-03
854 reads
A few days ago I had an interesting conversation on Twitter about my upcoming speaking
engagements. I really realized at this...
2011-07-26
781 reads
In the last months I have done a lot of SQL Server consulting engagements where I
have seen the craziest performance...
2011-07-05
816 reads
In today's weblog post I want to talk about the NULL bitmap mask and some mysteries
that you can encounter with...
2011-06-29
4,771 reads
In today's weblog posting I want to talk about replaying SQL Server workloads with
the RML Utilities. RML Utilities stands for...
2011-06-21
3,974 reads
Yesterday we got confirmation from SQLPASS if our submitted sessions for the upcoming SQLPASSS
summit in Seattle (October 11 – 14) were...
2011-06-16
702 reads
The most amazing journey that I have done in the past years was definitely SQLcruise
(see http://www.sqlcruise.com) – a SQL Server
event organized...
2011-06-12
550 reads
As announced in both of my SQL Server sessions at DevConnections in Karlsruhe/Germany
you can find here the slides & samples for...
2011-06-10
894 reads
By Steve Jones
I love Chicago. I went to visit three times in 2023: a Redgate event,...
By Brian Kelley
I have found that non-functional requirements (NFRs) can be hard to define for a...
By Kevin3NF
Can we normalize a couple of things? 1 – Trade Schools. Back in the...
Testing with AG on Linux with Cluster=NONE. it was all going ok and as...
Hi, I have two tables: one for headers with 9 fields and another for...
We're trying to understand how quick new versions of SQL server can be. Obviously...
Let’s consider the following script that can be executed without any error on both SQL Sever and PostgreSQL. We define the table t1 in which we insert three records:
create table t1 (id int primary key, city varchar(50)); insert into t1 values (1, 'Rome'), (2, 'New York'), (3, NULL);If we execute the following query, how will the records be sorted in both environments?
select city from t1 order by city;See possible answers