With PowerShell in one hand, and WMI in the other, DBAs can do almost anything in their Window's environments, and Laerte Junior is using his powers for good. He built a highly precise, highly configurable alerting system for his servers, and now shows us exactly how he did it.
Data is important, but today Steve Jones notes that what we do with it is even more important.
As your business grows, the number of applications grows as well, as do the SQL Server instances to support these applications. As a SQL DBA, you need to have a multi-server management dashboard that proactively tells you about the resource utilization on each SQL Server instance.
Revenge is a dish best served cold, but body temperature's OK, too.
This article demonstrates how to manage the development of complex queries by building them in stages with temporary tables, table variables and common table expressions.
Today Steve talks about security and the fact that your window for lax security is shrinking for new applications.
This article looks to provide a method that you can use to collect the author's top 10 SQL Server performance metrics automatically over time.
Steve Jones examines one of the issues of foreign chip production: security. Will this be an attack vector in the future?
"Counting" is essential to many high performance code techniques. SQL Server MVP, Jeff Moden, shows us how to make sure that we're "Counting" and not "Crippling" our trick-code.
By Steve Jones
I wrote about learning today for the editorial: I Can’t Make You Learn. I...
By ReviewMyDB
Fabric has CI/CD built in, but if you've tried to use it for database...
By Steve Jones
attriage – n. the state of having lost all control over how you feel...
Comments posted to this topic are about the item Forward Deployed Engineers
Comments posted to this topic are about the item TRY_PARSE vs TRY_CONVERT in SQL...
Comments posted to this topic are about the item DBCC CHECKDB Limits II
I have a SQL Server 2025 database that I want to check for corruption every night. One of the things we do is disable indexes used for ETL loads during the weekend and re-enable them on Monday morning. If we run DBCC over the weekend, are our disabled indexes checked for consistency?
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