External Article

Data Compression: Strategy, Capacity Planning and Best Practices

The data compression feature in SQL Server 2008 helps compress the data inside a database, and it can help reduce the size of the database. Apart from the space savings, data compression provides another benefit: Because compressed data is stored in fewer pages, queries need to read fewer pages from the disk, thereby improving the performance of I/O intensive workloads. However, extra CPU resources are required on the database server to compress and decompress the data, while data is exchanged with the application. Therefore, it is important to understand the workload characteristics when deciding which tables to compress.

Blogs

ISACA AI Material/Exam Prep Discount (May 18 – June 30, 2026)

By

If you are considering any of the ISACA AI certs like the Advanced Artificial...

A Fabric solution can be very cost effective

By

Are you currently using Microsoft Fabric or considering migrating to it? If so, there...

Track SQL Server Configuration Changes Using the Error Log

By

Track SQL Server Configuration Changes Using the Error Log If you...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

Before Using AI with Business Data, Read This

By rom_c99

Artificial intelligence tools are quickly becoming part of daily business operations, from document analysis...

Designing SQL Server ETL Pipelines That Don't Break at Scale

By SQL Expert

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Designing SQL Server ETL Pipelines...

Detecting Deadlocks Quickly

By Steve Jones - SSC Editor

Comments posted to this topic are about the item Detecting Deadlocks Quickly

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

Detecting Deadlocks Quickly

In the Database Engine, when a deadlock is detected, what does the detection interval shrink to (in time)?

See possible answers