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Blog Posts I Couldn’t Write in 2014

Every year, I finish up by emptying out my list of blog post ideas. It’s a freeing feeling, letting go of these ideas that I just couldn’t find a way to flesh out, and lets me feel better about new ideas in 2015.

Here’s the ideas I just couldn’t hit Publish on in 2014:

Database Administrator Warning Labels – you know those big cigarette warning labels in black and white print? Wouldn’t it be cool if Books Online carried similar warnings on certain pages? WARNING: TRIGGERS MAY CAUSE LONG, PAINFUL TROUBLESHOOTING.

How to Publish Scripts – whenever you put a script online, include the author name, date, version number, URL to get the latest version, and the license. No, it’s not enough to say “open source” – that means different things to different people. ChooseALicense.com makes it easy.

Cool SQL Server Features – DBAs on other platforms sometimes ask me, “Why would you ever use Microsoft SQL Server?” I’d love to have a short list of some of the amazing stuff we can do that other platforms struggle with. Stack Overflow’s list of hidden T-SQL features is a good start.

SQL Server Cheat Codes – in the spirit of the Konami code, fake keystroke combinations that trigger SQL Server back doors. “If you need brief power-ups for urgent queries, go into SSMS and hit up up down down left right left right B A, and your query will be granted higher memory and CPU resources than other queries.”

Consulting Lines updates – these were my favorite blog posts, and I wanted to write a few more about lines I’ve seen other consultants use successfully.

Backups have nothing to do with high availability. If your failover plan involves human beings manually restoring a database or running setup.exe, that’s not a high availability plan – that’s a disaster recovery plan.

What’s Your Budget? – no, not your company’s budget, your own personal budget in investing in your skills. Who’s going to make sure you can get your next job or move up the corporate ladder? Most companies only pay lip service, not money, to this concept. You’re going to have to invest your own time and money every year in your skills. Put it down in writing and figure out what’ll get you the most ROI.

Insanity Wolf

The Voices of SQL Server – I’ve long wanted to write a series of posts using a completely different voice, masquerading as a series of guest posts:

If you enjoyed that, here’s the 2013, 2012, and 2011 equivalents.

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