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Impactful Sessions I’ve Seen: T-SQL Tuesday #196

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This month I’m thrilled that Steve Hughes is hosting. I’ve read this Data on Wheels blog for a long time and I appreciate all that he does, especially given his struggles with ALS. I kicked myself a few times for not asking him to host earlier, but I’m glad I finally did.

I also was honored to meet him a few weeks ago and spend a little time with him.

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With that, let’s get to Steve’s invitation.

Lasting Memories from Events

These days I don’t go to a lot of sessions at events. It’s not that I can’t learn from others, or be inspired, but I find myself often viewing the time spent with others as more valuable. I can (and often do) work through articles, tutorials, and other resources online. For me, the time talking to others if more valuable than sitting in sessions.

However, I wasn’t always like that. Early on in my career, and even throughout, I went to a lot of sessions to learn things. Over the years, a few things have stood out to me. There is some recency bias here, and I’m sure I’m forgetting about some great sessions along the way. I don’t always remember titles, so forgive if I’ve made a mistake.

Tempdb in Early SQL Server – This was at the very first PASS Summit in Chicago, where Kalen Delaney have a talk on tempdb. I remember this because we had lots of contention in tempdb on SQL Server 6.5 and I was struggling. Finding solutions was one of the main reasons I got my boss to pay for the conference. I know I learned a few things and worked to restructure some queries after this. I even got to ask Kalen a question, which was a thrill for me.

Reporting Services CI – I think this was a Nigel Sammy session, but it might have been Roy Ernest or another friend. I was working to get DevOps style checks for SQL code at the time and I wondered how someone would do this for SSRS. It was an interesting session as it reaffirmed a lot of my guesses for how to approach this, but taught me an interesting way to try and verify parts of reports while ignoring others. The session focused on ensuring your clients were happy with report data more than visual layout.

The BI Power Hour – I went to a few of these, but the first one was with Donald Farmer, Euan Garden, and others at TechEd in 2003 or 2004. It was wildly entertaining and I appreciated the humorous approach to showing ways to use the BI platform. While I am not quite as entertaining, I try to add a few minor funny things in sessions.

Basic Backup for SQL Server – Sean McCown gave this at a few SQL Saturdays. I am not sure if I saw him in Dallas or elsewhere, but I think I was sitting in the room and decided not to go anywhere. Instead, I was curious what Sean might cover that I didn’t know. While I knew most of the material, there were a few tweaks in settings that made a different to performance. This session reminded me there is always more to learn, even when you think you know a topic well.

Clustering in 60 Minutes – Early in the SQL Server Central days, Brian was doing a lot of HA for his company. He presented this session at a PASS Summit where he built a SQL Server 7 or 2000 cluster live onstage in 60 minutes. It was cool to see and it reminded me that I should practice my demos and make them smooth.

Live Encryption Changes – Simon Sabin gave an interesting talk at SQL Bits where he showed a live app running against his database and how he could implement encryption without breaking the app. The app just ran a workload against his database in a loop. He made changes to the db in the background without causing errors, which was cool. I enjoyed learning the encryption techniques, but more this inspired my Architecting Zero Downtime Deployments, where I wrote my own app to do this.

There are plenty more, but I’ll stop here.

There’s always a lot to learn, and going to sessions is a great way to get inspired and help you build your own solutions.

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