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Database Weekly
The Complete Weekly Roundup of SQL Server News by SQLServerCentral.com
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Editorial
 

Who Are You?

I was sitting here thinking about the editorial when Kathi Kellenberger came to mind. She would frequently write about her favorite show, Star Trek. I too have been a fan of Star Trek since I was very young. However, my favorite show is a little more obscure and not as many people have seen it, Babylon 5.

Babylon 5 ran for five years and had a couple of feature-length movies and a failed spin-off. The show does a great job within it's budget. The stories are simply wonderful, with good science fiction in some spots, fun fantasy in others. A lot of the charm of the show comes from great characters (and great actors playing them). From the Captain John Sheridan, through his second, Commander Susan Ivanova, to the aliens in the cast, Delenn, G'Kar, Londo Mollari, we had a bunch of very interesting beings, who all had their own motivations, and story archs that saw them transformed over the length of the show. The principal villains, The Shadow, were more than just the heavies. While, the nominal "angels", the Vorlons, might not have the best of intentions for the universe (and the characters). One of my favorite groups in the show are the Rangers ("...We walk in the dark places no others will enter. We stand on the bridge and no one may pass..."). Seriously, if you haven't watched it, it's fun and well worth your time (fair warning, the special effects are dated).

What's that have to do with databases?

Well, it's OK to not be one of the cool kids. Sure, the shiny, Star Trek, stuff is great and all. So everyone and their brother is off in Snowflake or whatever the latest trend is. And yeah, it's actually very good tech. However, you can still be over working on different tech, SQL Server, PostgreSQL, heck, even Oracle. Just as it's OK to like Star Trek, or Babylon 5, without trashing either show, it's entirely possible to work within one technology stack without having to trash the others. Whenever I hear someone dinging on tech, and it's not explicit stuff like, oh, they don't like how T-SQL handles bit operations (just an example, not throwing rocks), but instead, almost a personal attack, I question their capabilities as technologists. You don't have to love the database system you're in, you just have to use it. I mean, I've written multiple books on execution plans in SQL Server, yet, I'm going say it straight up, those things suck. It's hard to get what you need out of them. However, they are the tool we have, and I'm going to use them to the best of my ability, and, I'm going to try to make it easier for others to use them too.

In short, it's fine to be a fan or Star Trek or Babylon 5. It's fine to be a fan of instead of . However, when you get all personal, attacking the other system based on emotional stuff, and trashing those using the other system too, you're just wrong.

I titled this based on one question asked in Babylon 5. I'll close with the second: What do you want?

Grant Fritchey

Join the debate, and respond to the editorial on the forums

 
The Weekly News
All the headlines and interesting SQL Server information that we've collected over the past week, and sometimes even a few repeats if we think they fit.
Vendors/3rd Party Products

The Redgate 100: Top Influencers List

We're recognizing the individuals in the database community for their work, online influence and thought leadership in our inaugural list of influencers: The Redgate 100.

AI/Machine Learning/Cognitive Services

Intelligent Decisioning: Ensuring fairness in analytically-driven decision making

From AllAnalytics

Attend this session during the SAS Explore event o...

The Role of AI in the Transformation of the Insurance Industry

From Dataversity

The insurance industry has been traditionally conservative with technology advances and hesitant to adopt new technologies. However, times are changing, and artificial intelligence (AI) is gaining much attention from...

An AI used medical notes to teach itself to spot disease on chest x-rays

From Technology Review Feed - Tech Review Top Stories

After crunching through thousands of chest x-rays ...

Administration of SQL Server

Manage SQL Databases in CentOS: Backup and Restore SQL Database

From SQLShack

In this article, we will learn how we can backup a...

Putting counters in names

From SQLServerCentral Blogs

It’s not all that unusual, or unreasonable to pu...

T-SQL Tuesday #154–Thinking about SQL Server 2022

From SQLServerCentral Blogs

This month is an interesting T-SQL Tuesday party, ...

Contained SQL Server Agent Jobs in SQL Server 2022

From SQLHA -- Allan Hirt

This blog post is part of T-SQL Tuesday #154. I pr...

SQL Server Best Practices

From DallasDBAs.com

As a CIO or CTO, one of your primary responsibilit...

Create, Read, Update and Delete Data in SQL Server Tables

From MSSQL Tips

Learn the basics to create, read, update and delete data in SQL Server tables with these various examples.

Analysis Services / BI on the MS Stack

Introducing ALLSELECTED in DAX

From Sqlbi

Introduction to ALLSELECTED, which is an extremely...

Azure SQL

Migrating SQL Server workloads FAQ

From Azure SQL

Are you (or your customers) considering moving on-...

Azure SQL Security: The What, Why & How of Securing your Data with Azure SQL (Ep. 6) | Data Exposed

From Azure SQL

Auditing helps you maintain regulatory compliance, understand database activity, and gain insight into discrepancies and anomalies that could indicate business concerns or suspected security violations. It enables and facilitates...

Azure SQL Managed Instance

Getting started with Azure SQL Managed Instance

From SQLShack

Introduction In the previous article, Getting star...

Azure Synapse (SQL Data Warehouse and Data Lake)

T-SQL Tuesday 154 – Azure Synapse Link for SQL Server 2022 testing

From Kevin Chant

Reading Time: 3 minutes For this months T-SQL Tue...

Big Data

Fun With KQL – Format_DateTime

From Arcane Code

Fun With KQL - Format_DateTime

Community Interests

The Redgate 100

From SQLServerCentral Blogs

The Redgate 100 is a list of 100 people that are i...

Computing in the Cloud (Azure, Google, AWS)

Introduction to AWS RDS SQL Server Features

From MSSQL Tips

In this article, we take a look at an overview of ...

6 Tips for Controlling Your Cloud Costs in a Recession

From IT Pro - Microsoft Windows Information, Solutions, Tools

Here are six steps to recession-proofing your clou...

Cloud Adoption Will Fail Because of the Skills Gap

From IT Pro - Microsoft Windows Information, Solutions, Tools

The cloud skills gap has reached a crisis level in...

Conferences, Classes, Events, and Webinars

Redgate Summit: The Database DevOps Transformation

Digital transformation and data modernization are frequently cited as high-value strategic projects that are crucial to achieving competitive advantage. At the same time, delivery of code in agile and predictable ways has led to many businesses adopting DevOps practices. Throughout this event we will explore how Database DevOps can be the function that accelerates transformation projects. Join us On October 6th as we invite experts to share their insider tips and tricks.

Time to register for PASS Data Community Summit

The schedule at a glance is now available. Get ready for a week of learning and connecting at the data community homecoming. LAST chance to benefit from Late Bird prices for online and in-person passes.

Data Mining / Data Analysis

Can we wage war against opioids with data and analytics?

From AllAnalytics

Dedicated people, funding and data analytics can j...

Using governance to spur, not stall, data access for analytics

From Technology Review Feed - Tech Review Top Stories

Data governance has historically been a serious bo...

DevOps and Continuous Delivery (CI/CD)

New GitHub certifications for Azure partners

From Kevin Chant

Reading Time: 2 minutes In this post I want raise...

ETL/SSIS/Azure Data Factory/Biml

What is Azure Data Factory?

From Petri IT Knowledgebase

Azure Data Factory is a cloud-based data integrati...

Oracle/PostgreSQL/MySQL/other RDBMS

PSQL Phriday: A Monthly Blog Event for the PostgreSQL Community

Not quite a year ago, I had the opportunity to give a keynote address at PGConf NYC 2021 as part of Timescale’s sponsorship. Thankfully the leadership at Timescale supported me addressing the topic of community and how, particularly in light of the upward trend of PostgreSQL adoption, investing in the growing community can help everyone involved.

Performance Tuning SQL Server

The subtleties of proper B+Tree implementation

From Ayende @ Rahien

I mentioned earlier that B+Trees are a gnarly beas...

The Effect of a Slow Registry on SQL Server

From Michael J. Swart

I want to describe some symptoms that SQL Server m...

Production postmortem: The missed indexing reference

From Ayende @ Rahien

RavenDB has a really nice feature, it allows you t...

SQL Server Community Tools: sp_PressureDetector Doesn’t Show You Irrelevant Waits

From Erik Darling Data

Which Wait Did They Go? I tried to really focus sp_PressureDetector on things that really matter to overall SQL Server performance, and specifically related to CPU and memory pressure. It seemed...

Intelligent Query Processing: feature family additions

From Microsoft SQL Server Blog

SQL Server 2022 expands and improves query performance feedback mechanisms and adds two new featuresparameter sensitive plans and optimized plan forcing. The post Intelligent Query Processing: feature family additions appeared...

PowerPivot/PowerQuery/PowerBI

Power BI App audiences with AAD Security Groups

From FourMoo

With the recent announcement (Announcing Public Pr...

Retrieving user access list to all reports in your PowerBI tenant using Powershell

From TomazTsql

From previous blogpost(s): Ever wanted to get the ...

Power BI Apps for multiple audiences has arrived!

From Guy in a Cube

This has been a feature that has been asked for long time! The ability to control who can see what content within a published Power BI App! You can...

Professional Development

Customer experience and the future of work

From Technology Review Feed - Tech Review Top Stories

Major trends such as the impact of covid-19 on acc...

R Language

Declaring a Minimum R Version in Packages

From Curated SQL

Hugo Gruson and Maelle Salmon show how to set a minimum version of R itself in a package: There have been much talk and many blog…Continue readingDeclaring a Minimum R...

Security News and Issues

Weird Fallout from Peiter Zatko’s Twitter Whistleblowing

From Schneier on Security

People are trying to dig up dirt on Peiter Zatko, ...

TeamTNT Hits 150K Docker Containers via Malicious Cloud Images

From IT Pro - Microsoft Windows Information, Solutions, Tools

Honeypot activity exposed two credentials that the...

Unflagging Iranian Threat Activity Spurs Warnings, Indictments From US Government

From Dark Reading: Dark Reading News Analysis

Authorities are cracking down on persistent cyberc...

Fighting back against Ransomware

From Steve Stedman

In the last year I have seen far too much ransomware. I have seen some people lose their databases with no way of getting them back, and I have...

T-SQL and Query Languages

Build Conditional SQL Server Logic - SQL IF, BEGIN, END, ELSE, ELSEIF

From MSSQL Tips

Learn how to build conditional logic when writing ...

SQL Date Calculation Simplifications in SQL Server

From MSSQL Tips

In this tip, learn how to simplify date calculatio...

T-SQL Tuesday #154 – SQL Server 2022, IS DISTINCT FROM

From Simple Talk

Despite my recent job change from full time T-SQL ...

How To Retrieve the Last Non-NULL Value in SQL Server

From MSSQL Tips

In this article, we show different ways of using S...

DELETE TOP x rows with an ORDER BY

From SQL Undercover

This was an interesting question that I was asked yesterday and something that I’d never really thought of before. Can you delete the top x number of rows based...

Tech News

Try out Chocolatey

From Curated SQL

Grant Fritchey makes a recommendation: Chocolatey,...

Look Into Chocolatey

From Scary DBA (Grant Fritchey)

Just a suggestion, but I’d say you should look i...

Micron Breaks Ground on Its $15 Billion EUV DRAM Fab in the U.S.

From AnAndTech

Micron this week broke ground on its leading-edge ...

$60 DIY Raspberry Pi NAS Kit Offers SATA, Impressive Cooling

From Tom's Hardware US

A custom case bundled with a flashy cooler help tu...

Arduino's IDE Reaches 2.0 Milestone

From Tom's Hardware US

Arduino has announced that its development environ...

There’s no Tiananmen Square in the new Chinese image-making AI

From Technology Review Feed - Tech Review Top Stories

There’s a new text-to-image AI in town. With ERN...

Relay Attack against Teslas

From Schneier on Security

Nice work: Radio relay attacks are technically complicated to execute, but conceptually easy to understand: attackers simply extend the range of your existing key using what is essentially a high-tech...

5 Steps to Strengthening Cyber Resilience

From Dark Reading: Dark Reading News Analysis

Organizations are thinking about their cyber resil...

Virtualization and Containers/Kubernetes

VMware to Launch New vCenter Converter Tool in Beta

From Petri IT Knowledgebase

vCenter Converter, the former physical to virtual ...

flyway

Finding the Version of a Flyway-managed Database Using SQL

Maintaining a version of a database opens a lot of possibilities, especially if an automated process can easily grab the current version, at runtime, using just SQL. You might, for example, have a routine that is only appropriate after a particular version. It is also very handy to be able to associate entries in an event log or bug report with the database version. No more desultory quests, when dealing with support issues, or when bug fixing, to find which database version was running when the bug happened.

 
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