Blog Posts

Blog Post

A New Word: ioia

ioia – n.the wish that you could see statistics overlaid on every person you encounter – checking the signal strength of their compatibility, a measure of their trustworthiness. I...

2024-05-10

17 reads

Blog Post

DBA and Developer: Allies or Adversaries?

In the expansive landscape of software development, the relationship between Database Administrators (DBAs) and Developers has been a subject of intrigue, debate, and occasional drama. Do they collaborate harmoniously...

2024-05-10 (first published: )

310 reads

Blog Post

Degrees and Trade Schools

Can we normalize a couple of things? 1 – Trade Schools. Back in the 80’s trade classes in high school and post high school were frowned upon, or looked...

2024-05-08

18 reads

Blog Post

Techorama 2024 – Slides

You can find the slidedeck for my Techorama session “Microsoft Fabric for Dummies” on github.
The post Techorama 2024 – Slides first appeared on Under the kover of business intelligence.

2024-05-08

50 reads

Blogs

A New Word: Anderance

By

anderance – n. the awareness that your partner perceives the relationship from a totally...

Troubleshooting SQL Server – Starting with the Error Log

By

We’ve all been there. Someone walks up and asks, “Is SQL Server having issues?”...

From OLTP to Analytics: Bridging the Gap with Modern SQL Architectures

By

In the beginning, there was OLTP – Online Transaction Processing. Fast, reliable, and ruthlessly...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

Experimental Verification of the NKTg Law on 8 Planets (NASA 2024 Data, SQL)

By NKTgLaw

Nguyen Khanh Tung Email: traiphieu.com@gmail.com ORCID: 0009-0002-9877-4137 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Abstract This article presents a numerical...

The Yutes

By Grant Fritchey

Comments posted to this topic are about the item The Yutes

Work out closing balance using opening balance of prior month

By Bhagat

Hello, I think I need a recursive cte query but unsure of the logic....

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

Tables with a SPARSE Column and Consumption

True or False:  Tables with a SPARSE column consume more space than regular columns if most values are NOT NULL.

See possible answers