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| Giving Thanks My last two months have been packed full of activity. I’ve had the amazing opportunity to be with PostgreSQL friends in New York, Greece, and Seattle. In between, it was a treat to be back in Pittsburgh for the first SQL Saturday since before the pandemic. The strength of the database community at each event was inspiring and encouraging. As I reflect back on many of the things that happened at each event, there are many things to be thankful for. Many relationships that I grew to cherish just a little more. But it was something that happened in Seattle at PASS Summit that I can’t stop thinking about, which gives me the most joy. Something that most attendees had no idea was happening all around them. Three years ago, I had the opportunity to represent Timescale as one of the keynote speakers at PGConf NYC 2021. It was the first in-person conference after the pandemic, squeezed in right between the world opening up for six weeks, and then shutting down again just before Christmas. In that keynote I didn’t talk about Timescale at all, but about community. I shared my experience over the years in a different database community and wondered out loud if there were things each community could learn from the other. At the same time, I began learning a little bit about a schism in the PostgreSQL community that had been ongoing for a couple of years. Everyone seemed to know just a little bit of the story, but never the root cause. And so, for the last three years I’ve worked to build relationships in the PASS Summit community, the PostgreSQL.org community, and the Postgres World community. I’ve been blessed to make great friends from across the globe in all three. And, finally, all three were together under one roof during PASS Summit in Seattle two weeks ago. SQL Server users got to meet PostgreSQL users. PgUS was on-site to talk about PostgreSQL with hundreds of attendees that are new to the platform. Some of the long-time leaders of the PostgreSQL project were able to hear from the #SQLFamily about SQL Server and the things that confuse them about PostgreSQL. And long-time friends from both PostgreSQL.org and Postgres World sat and had conversations over lunch and dinner to begin exploring how each can help the other. It was a thrill to see so much happening earlier this month and just a small glimpse of what I had hoped for three years ago come to fruition. There’s more work to do on all fronts. But I am so thankful for the many seeds that were planted, new… and renewed relationships that were formed, and a vision for what the future can hold as we continue to work together sharing our love for data and databases. Happy Thanksgiving to the U.S. contingent. And to everyone else, you can still share with others what you’re thankful for this week, too. Ryan Booz 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 |
Extracting and importing data for development and testing is made trickier due to issues such as constraints, dependencies, and special data types. This article introduces a cross-RDBMS solution with JSON for data storage and PowerShell cmdlets that use ODBC to help automate extraction and import, and JSON Schema for validation. Just provide a DSN, and you’re good to go! |
Administration of SQL Server |
When analytic data is stored directly in SQL Serve... |
A while back I wrote about how to use a Cross Platform (or Clusterless) Availability Group to seed a database from a Windows SQL instance into a pod in... |
This month, I prompted bloggers to discu... |
Conferences, Classes, Events, and Webinars |
In this Advochats episode of Simple Talks, we welcome a new Advocate to the podcast – Kellyn Gorman! And since Kellyn is the Oracle Advocate, this week’s show focuses on how Oracle differs from other data platforms that the advocates have used. |
I had meant to follow up my recent post on how to ... |
This article describes the use of visual calculations for a scenario where they may be particularly relevant: computing open orders at the end of a time period. Open orders... |
Microsoft Fabric ( Azure Synapse Analytics, OneLake, ADLS, Data Science) |
Reading Time: 5 minutesIn this post I want to co... |
We can consume a Kusto database in Fabric from many different places: Notebooks, semantic models, real time dashboards and more. Kusto register all queries sent by the consumers in the query history. Sometimes, either for logging purpose or to analyze and fix some bug, we need to identify the queries the database is receiving and executing. |
I work with a lot of clients that are creating analytic systems. They all collect large numbers of data points and analyze them. Most do a fairly good job... |
Performance Tuning SQL Server |
Of RECOMPILE Hints And Query Store: Where Are My P... |
I wanted to figure out how big (or approximately h... |
We’ve gone through a lot of detail about locales and collations here, but what should you do when it is time to set up a database? Here is a... |
Based on checking logs, and my own personal needs I added more categories of keywords to pgdoc.link: environment variables, like: PGHOST config file names, like: pgpass functions from some... |
Postgres is being used more and more for analytical workloads. There’s a few hidden gems I recently ran across that are really handy for doing SQL for data analysis,... |
PowerPivot/PowerQuery/PowerBI |
Elena Drakulevska opens a can of worms: You’re presenting an amazing Power BI report filled with insights, but it feels like something’s missing. The visuals… |
Today at Microsoft Ignite, Microsoft announced SQL... |
T-SQL and Query Languages |
A Little About Paging Queries And Batch Mode In SQL Server Thanks for watching! Going Further If this is the kind of SQL Server stuff you love learning about,... |
If you’ve ever been through a large US airport, ... |
In this article, I will discuss hiring and motivating technical polyglots. A polyglot is a person who speaks multiple languages at a conversational level, and according to preply.com, more... |
The 11th episode is now live, recorded a few weeks ago at the PASS Data Community Summit. This was a lot of fun, us grabbing a space in the... The... |
You may have read that it was a big week for Bluesky. If you’re not familiar, Bluesky is, essentially, a Twitter clone that publishes short-form status updates. It gained more... |
The inventor of the World Wide Web is on a laudable mission to give everyone control of their online data. He's fighting an uphill battle. |
"It's going to be hard to catch us, but I certainly hope people try." |
Tools for Dev (SSMS, ADS, VS, etc.) |
Recently a customer asked if SQL Compare and SQL D... |
Dashboards in ERPNext offer a powerful solution for visualising data and tracking key performance indicators (KPIs) in real-time. By customising these dashboards, businesses can tailor the display to meet their specific needs, ensuring that important metrics are easily accessible and relevant. Whether you’re monitoring sales performance, project progress, or inventory levels, a well-designed dashboard can provide valuable insights with just a glance. |
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