[aeengine-devel] vacate lobe
Status: Beta
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rakkis
From: Joseph D. <ur...@tj...> - 2007-06-08 02:00:17
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<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"> <html> <head> <meta content="text/html;charset=ISO-8859-1" http-equiv="Content-Type"> </head> <body bgcolor="#ffffff" text="#000000"> <img alt="tartar" src="http://zgwagon.com/placard.gif"><br> Which brings me to the title of this little blog posting. I recently decided to embark on a long-needed cleaning out of the closet in my office.<br> I came across this interesting article while surfing the net, errrr, I mean, conducting online research, yes, that's what I mean. I just also plan to start posting over there, too.<br> What does your company do to document and share metadata? Of course, the exact performance difference is difficult to calculate - especially over an online forum and without knowledge of the specific DBMS being used. So the Sarbanes-Oxley Act has brought visibility and additional rigor into DBA practices and procedures.<br> Do you have a workflow and task approval process in place? And I doubt that the patent office keeps a record of when an inventor dies, so the "living inventors" part might take some work.<br> These are the very same folks I hear complaining the loudest. And I doubt that the patent office keeps a record of when an inventor dies, so the "living inventors" part might take some work.<br> Not a bad idea, right? I will not attribute them to any particular publication or analyst group, though. You can read the article, Search for the most prolific inventors is a patent struggle for yourself if you'd like. The folks who run the site, TechTarget, have told me that plan to focus on the many things that keeps data management professionals "up at night. Also interesting is the title at the top of the heap: Database Architect. If your bank deposits are even a penny off, you know about it, and fix it. According to Gartner analysts Donald Feinberg and Ted Friedman we won't need databases or DBAs and most of the data we'll need in the future will be unstructured anyway.<br> Well, no, they won't. Flying sure is an adventure now-a-days, isn't it? Not bad - I reckon many of you toiling away out there is database-land would be happy with such a salary.<br> I like the balance much better here at Giant Eagle.<br> To tell you the truth, I'm not sure, but I have my sneaking suspicions.<br> At any rate, I question their titles and what they map to exactly in the real world.<br> Of course, the exact performance difference is difficult to calculate - especially over an online forum and without knowledge of the specific DBMS being used. I will not attribute them to any particular publication or analyst group, though.<br> Now to be a bit more skeptical of the Information Week piece, the actual titles in this article give me pause. Of course, it wouldn't just be a truly simple query because you'd still have to account for patents with multiple inventor names. Or it might mean learning WebSphere or SAP in addition to the DBMS.<br> In late May, a new company named EnterpriseDB Corp. The second task will clearly take more time.<br> This Repository was to be the central hub of all corporate metadata. I know, I know, a lot of you aren't because it generates a lot of additional workload for you.<br> First of all, there was the big honking project to scan everything and document it and get it into the Repository. With a clear, concise, and agreed upon definition?<br> And what about data service administrator?<br> </body> </html> |