Scalability
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100 results found, displaying items 1 - 20
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MOSS 2007 and SharePoint 2010: Walking the line between past and future
Scalability and virtualization issues in SharePoint 2007 are much improved in SharePoint 2010.
Windows IT Pro
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Dan Holme
The Inevitable Virtualization of SQL Server
Improvements in performance and scalability in ESX Server and Hyper-V are making SQL Server a viable candidate for virtualization.
SQL Server Magazine
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Michael Otey
Windows IT Pro Editors' Best Awards
We identify the best products for Windows in 15 categories, including Product of the Year, Breakthrough Product, and Special Achievement. Start here to find products that will maximize the ROI of your IT infrastructure.
Windows IT Pro
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Editors
Windows IT Pro Editors' Best Awards
Windows IT Pro
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Editors
SQLQueryStress
Windows IT Pro
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Kevin Kline
SQLQueryStress
You can use this tool to quickly and easily test how a query will affect your system performance.
SQL Server Magazine
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Kevin Kline
Designing for Your Workload: Don’t Wait Until the Last Minute
Last week’s tax deadline presented some overwhelming system problems for Intuit--and offers an important lesson for database and application developers.
SQL Server Magazine
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Brian Moran
Enterprise IM: Comparing Security, Stability, Scalability
These four products approach IM in different ways. This review will help you determine the best solution for your environment.
Windows IT Pro
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Kevin Carbray
Readers’ Choice: Shaping the IT Industry
The 2006 Readers' Choice awards continue our tradition of honoring the products our readers tell us are tops in their categories. And this year, AMD dual-core Opteron processors take the overall Best New Product award.
Windows IT Pro
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Editors
Hardware
Readers identify their favorite 64-bit system, blade server, nonblade server, desktop computer, laptop/notebook, PDA/cell phone/smart phone, and thin client.
Windows IT Pro
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Editors
Systems Management
Readers vote for the best Systems Management products, awarding top honors to 18 tools.
Windows IT Pro
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Editors
Peer-to-Peer: The Next Replication Generation
Peer-to-peer transactional replication is the direct descendant of SQL Server 2000’s bi-directional transactional replication. But this newer version of the technology provides improved availability and scalability as well as simplified setup wizards.
SQL Server Magazine
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Matt Nunn
Keeping an Eye on VirusScan Updates
Use these scripts to check McAfee VirusScan Enterprise definitions in the registry.
Windows IT Pro
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Bill Stewart
Designing for Performance: Lookup Tables
Michelle Poolet explores recent proposals promoting all-in-one lookup tables and how that design stacks up to the more traditional approach of using multiple tables.
SQL Server Magazine
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Michelle A. Poolet
Ready, Set--Select!
Knowing what 2005 offers puts you in the driver’s seat, so grab the latest Community Technology Preview (CTP) and get up to speed on SQL Server 2005.
SQL Server Magazine
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Michael Otey
Governmental Requirements Push Data-Protection Vendors to Comply
Readers chose disaster-prevention and recovery tools that help them comply with governmental legislation for data protection.
SQL Server Magazine
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Dawn Cyr
Performance-Tuning the Data Model: Configuring the Database
You can improve performance by retrofitting a database with indexes and more powerful hardware, but you can never completely compensate for a bad data model. Performance-tuning SQL Server starts with a sound database configuration and data model.
SQL Server Magazine
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Michelle A. Poolet
Running SQL Server on RAID
If you can afford it, RAID is the easiest and best way to implement fault tolerance.
SQL Server Magazine
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Michelle A. Poolet
What You Need to Know About the Future of Itanium-based Windows Products
Do new 64-bit technologies spell the end of the Itanium?
Windows IT Pro
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Paul Thurrott
Betting on 64-Bit
Although SQL Server 2000 (64-bit) has been available for 2 years, few organizations have been willing to put their money on it. Here are three scenarios that demonstrate that betting on 64-bit SQL Server can pay off--both now and in the long run.
SQL Server Magazine
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Douglas McDowell
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