Learn how to turn on and use newer SQL Server database recovery option called “Accelerated Database Recover”.
There is an old joke that upgrading to the latest SQL Server is wasted on some DBAs, because they will still stick mainly to what worked in SQL Server 2005. This type of DBA is becoming rare, in my experience, but there is still some truth in the idea that many of us don’t get the ‘full power’ from our SQL Server tools. We work with them as they come, ‘out of the box’, and use only a fraction of their features. The time to explore ‘new stuff’, at least as much as we’d like to, remains elusive.
The challenges of information overload can weigh on technology workers.
In part 3 of the U-SQL Stairway, we look at how multiple files can be processed with a single U-SQL statement.
In this tip we look at how to move SQL Server tables from one filegroup to another filegroup.
We all have these days as a DBA, hopefully they are few and far between for most of us. This morning I walked into the office and found a stack of emails saying that a developer had responded to a support ticket and modified the values in one of our tables and got it wrong. OK, […]
Today Steve Jones wonders if software developers would make changes to software on their own, without direction from management.
Learn about the factors that should be taken into account if you are considering hosting SAP HANA in a public cloud.
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Comments posted to this topic are about the item Vectors in SQL Server 2025
Comments posted to this topic are about the item Odd Sequences
What values are returned from this code?
CREATE SEQUENCE NumericSequence
AS NUMERIC(5,1)
START WITH 1.0
INCREMENT BY 0.1;
GO
SELECT NEXT VALUE FOR NumericSequence
GO
SELECT NEXT VALUE FOR NumericSequence
GO See possible answers