Sunday, November 30, 2008
Upcoming Event - Pensacola SQL Users Group
Tuesday, October 07, 2008
Microsoft BI Conference, Day One
I know when a company puts on a show like the Microsoft BI Conference, there are going to be announcements, and pre-announcements of new products and features. The bullets:
Project Gemini - A self-serve BI application, rooted in Excel and an in-memory datastore the primary goal of which is to allow user creation of SSAS databases. Databases that are then managable and not 'spread marts' or 'spreadsheet purgatory'. Donald Farmer actually demonstrated filtering and sorting 20 millon rows on a thousand dollar quad-core pc.
Project Madison - With the DATAllegro purchase, Microsoft is quickly integrating the newly aquired MPP capability into the Madison release targeted for the first half of 2010. Jesse Franklin demonstrated clean-cache queries against a 150 terabyte data store accross 24 instances of SQL Server. The response times were screaming.
Project Kilimanjoro - This will be a focused release of SQL Server, that I understand to be a re-architecture (read euthanasia) of the failed Report Builder functionality in SQL 2005. Instead, a set of task focused add-ins to Excel that will pave the way for component based report writing. No demo, but very exciting rhetoric.
Friday, September 12, 2008
Countdown to Microsoft BI Conference
Tuesday, September 09, 2008
Caffeine and WiFi, Wooo hooo
Knowing my profession, personal coffee habits, and the amount of travel I do, getting into a Starbucks to use the card is not going to be a problem. Second, with a location within walking distance of every point on the globe, we are one step closer to universal Internet access.
Friday, August 22, 2008
When Processes Break
The priceless comment from one of my senior team members was something like "...everybody knows that, but nobody does anything about it..."
Thursday, August 21, 2008
File Under SSAS Demo Creation
Obviously, in a production environment the client may have valid reasons to employ both a Check-In and Check-Out date dimension role. However, production hardware deployment won't have the constraints of an all-up demo environment executing SQL Server, SharePoint and PerformancePoint an a single (laptop) machine.
Tuesday, August 19, 2008
Techmixer University
To those of you that attended, thanks again for your time, attention and questions.
Saturday, August 02, 2008
Travel Size Supermarket
From a micro roll of paper towels to sink-sized Woolite for on-the-road laundry (in the event of an unplanned extra night for instance).
Friday, August 01, 2008
Belated Congratulations
Saturday, July 26, 2008
ETL Specification, Part 1
- What the developer is to do
- How the developer will know when it the work is done
- Anticipate and eliminate points of potential confusion
Item #3 is the whole reason for the specification. It is in thinking the design through in which truly calendar-busting problems are resolved. A recent client suggested that because development tools (and frameworks) had evolved to such an efficiency point, the task of software design was obsolete. Nothing, in my opinion, could be further from the truth.
"...I have always found that plans are useless but planning is indispensable." - Dwight D. Eisenhower
More on this subject shortly...
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Steel City SQL, part 2
Tuesday, January 29, 2008
Steel City SQL Users - Speakers Needed
If you know of anyone who either may be interested in addressing this group directly or may in turn know someone interested in delivering a presentation, please don't hesitate to reach me via my blog or via the contact us link at Steel City SQL's site.
Wednesday, January 23, 2008
Alabama .Net Code Camp 6
Monday, November 12, 2007
SQL Saturday Presentation Available

My presentation on Data Mining with SQL 2005 will soon be available for download here.
Thanks again to everybody for a wonderful experience. This was beyond a doubt the best produced, best-attended, Code Camp event I have participated in as a speaker. The facilities at Seminole Community College were just first-class, as pictured here in the main atrium.
Friday, November 09, 2007
On My Way to SQL Saturday!

1. Southwest Airlines new, business-friendly boarding process rocks!
2. The Orlando International Airport is my favorite, among major-city terminals.
3. The Hertz Neverlost GPS system blows. A batting average of .333 is great if you are a major league ballplayer. However, most consumers of these services (devices) can achieve that level of proficiency without a paper map. I guess I will await, patiently the general availability of the promising Dash. In the meantime, truth in advertising would suggest Hertz rename the product to EVERLOST.
Hardly BI related, but it is my blog.
Thursday, November 08, 2007
PerformancePoint Server Evaluation Editions
This is surely one of the more exciting products released in the last few years that will enable organizations to drive strategy down to the individual worker, via a "BI for the Masses" execution.
High Tech Barn Raising!
If you are interested in the concept, or participating, you can get more information at Startup Birmingham.
Unfortunately, I will not be participating this year, as I have previously committed to speaking at SQL Saturday. See you Saturday if you are in the Orlando area.
Tuesday, October 30, 2007
Wanted: Talented BI Professionals
Tuesday, October 09, 2007
Presentation Available
Monday, October 08, 2007
Alabama .Net Code Camp V
Well the Fifth Alabama .Net Code Camp is in the books. I would like to express my humble gratitude to attendees who drove from the ends of the state to attend the event. If you had half as much fun as I did, then it was worth the time and effort. As promised, my presentation "Everything I Ever Wanted to Know About Beginning Business Intelligence with SQL 2005" will be available via ComFrame's website soon. As soon as I know the files are available, I will post an update here so the news can easily get out to RSS readers.
If you are interested in the methodology discussed to 'bootstrap' db connections and store configurations in the database, please read my post on SSIS configurations.
I have added some content to the SQLBI blog, notably a list of web resources I referenced in Saturday's discussion, and a few links to Amazon.com for the book titles I mentioned as well. Finally, I would ask that if you enjoyed the discussion on Saturday, or anything that I am writing here, please make use of the comment links available on my posts to send feedback.
Finally, I am working on a post to go up by the middle of this week, that will walk through the steps (and screen shots) I used to create the examples and demos in Saturday's discussion. Stay tuned here for updates.