SQL Server User Group in Sydney CBD
Victor Isakov (MCT,
MCITP, MCM, SQL Ranger) is starting a new SQL Server User
Group Meeting during lunchtimes in the Sydney CBD. It will run on the 1st
Wednesday of every month, from 12:30 to 14:30, at Westpac Place.
This new
user group will focus more on best practices, optimization, design
and implementation - areas specifically geared towards the corporate sector.
The meetings will be of high quality that you would typically see at
conferences such as Microsoft Tech Ed, SQL PASS or SQL Connections. A number of
industry experts and Microsoft personnel have committed to presenting at this
new user group in 2009.
The meetings
of this new user group will rotate through 3 core themes:
- Database
Administrator (DBA) Focuses on
the responsibilities of the Database Administrator, covering areas
such as disaster recovery, management, performance tuning,
security and operational excellence. - Database
Developer (DBD) Focuses on
the responsibilities of the Database Developer, covering areas such
as query writing, query tuning, indexing strategies, locking architecture
and database design. - Database
Architect (ARC) Focuses on
the responsibilities of the Database Architect, covering areas such
as high-availability, storage, consolidation / virtualization and
scalability.
The details
for the new SQL Server User Group are as follows:
Time |
12:30 to 14:30 |
Agenda |
12:30 - 13:00: Registration / Networking 13:00 - 13:15: News / Case Studies 13:15 - 14:30: Presentation |
Location |
Westpac Place 275 Kent St, Sydney, NSW 2000 |
Dates |
4th Feb, 4th Mar, 1st Apr, 6th May, 3rd Jun, 1st Jul, 5th Aug, 2nd Sep, 7th Oct, 4th Nov, 2nd Dec |
Contact |
It is important to pre-register for the SQL Server User Group
Meetings to help facilitate entry into Westpac Place.
You can come on the day without pre-registering, and
are encouraged to "bring a friend" but it will take longer to
gain entry.
So please email victor@sqlserversolutions.com.au if you plan to
attend.
Otherwise
please pass on this information to your colleagues and / or managers so as to
encourage attendance. We would like to see the corporate sector encourage
attendance and participation in this new SQL Server User Group.
Just tell
your manager these meetings represent "free
quality training", something that they will surely love in the
current economic climate. J
The first
three meetings for 2009 are as follows:
Topic: DBA: Best Practices for All DBAs to
Follow
Date: 4th February
Description: As the popularity of SQL Server
continues to grow, so is the demand for new SQL Server DBAs. Unfortunately, you
can't “go to school” to learn how to become a DBA. Most DBAs learn from books,
seminars, short classes, and trial and error. This session is designed to
encourage a cross-pollination of ideas and best practices between DBAs from
different organizations. It includes best practices from the trenches which can
only be obtained through experience.
Topic: DBD: A Comprehensive Guide to
Indexing in SQL Server
Date: 4th March
Description: With the release of SQL Server 2008
the database developer has more choices in their arsenal for optimally indexing
database solutions. In this session we will explore the different indexing technologies
that are available in SQL Server 2005 and SQL Server 2008, such as included,
composite and filtered indexes. We will discuss the primary design
considerations and tradeoffs made when implementing an indexing strategy and
present more "exotic" scenarios such as how to implement custom hash
indexes, how to combine filtered indexes with sparse columns, partitioned
indexes and how to implement partitioned views with different underlying table
indexes.
Topic: ARCH: Reducing Your Storage Cost in
SQL Server 2008
Date: 1st April
Description: Are increasing storage costs hurting
your bottom line as data sizes keep growing throughout your organization? In
this session, we explore how SQL Server can help you lower your storage costs.
We start with Microsoft SQL Server 2005 partitioning to transparently migrate
older data to lower-cost storage tiers over time. We then discuss new storage
cost-saving functionality in Microsoft SQL Server 2008 such as data
compression, backup compression, and sparse columns, filtered indexes, file
stream which can get you to 50% or more reduction in storage requirements for
typical applications. Throughout the session, we share experiences, insights,
and best practices from SQL Server customers and Microsoft-internal deployments.
Learn how to make good use of these technologies in combination.
Comments
- Anonymous
June 18, 2009
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