2020-02-28
1,158 reads
2020-02-28
1,158 reads
According to this post, I rate 2019 as a Failure. Of the books I planned to read, I read 2. I started 2 others, but they’re in progress, even...
2020-02-28
168 reads
Today Steve starts a mid year review of his career goals and encourages you to do the same.
2020-02-28
145 reads
Steve talks data virtualization in the age of growing data sets and larger workloads
2020-02-27
326 reads
2020-02-27
724 reads
2020-02-26
295 reads
2020-02-26
635 reads
2020-02-25
746 reads
2020-02-24
691 reads
2020-02-19
614 reads
By HeyMo0sh
In my experience, FinOps success has never been just about tools or dashboards. It...
By HeyMo0sh
As a DevOps person, I know that to make FinOps successful, you need more...
By HeyMo0sh
As someone who works in DevOps, I’m always focused on creating systems that are...
Comments posted to this topic are about the item Restoring On Top II
Comments posted to this topic are about the item SQL Art 2: St Patrick’s...
Comments posted to this topic are about the item Breaking Down Your Work
I have a database, DNRTest, that has a number of tables and other objects in it. The other day, I was trying to mock up a test and ran this code on the same server:
-- run yesterday CREATE DATABASE DNRTest2 GO USE DNRTest2 GO CREATE TABLE NewTable (id INT) GOToday, I realize that I need a copy of DNRTest for another mockup, and I run this:
-- run today USE Master BACKUP DATABASE DNRTest TO DISK = 'dnrtest.bak' GO RESTORE DATABASE DNRTest2 FROM DISK = 'dnrtest.bak' WITH REPLACEWhat happens? See possible answers