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24 Hour DBT2 run on the Intel X-25M SSD

Following up on my previous post Peter asked if he could see a 24 hour run on the Intel drive…  took me a few days because I am doing some testing on a few other things, but I kicked a run off yesterday before leaving the Vegas airport…  Here ya go:

These are roughly 10 minute TPM averages.  As you can see their is a definate decline in performance the longer the drive is active.   Its realtively small% wise, only about 6% off of peak…  but the delcine is easy to spot.

What’s this mean?  It you beat the hell out of the drive over a long contious period things slow down the longer the drive is in continuous use.   Just an FYI, the drive was 78% full during these tests.

Love this URL

The link to Sun's Open Source pages is

http://sun.com/ponytail


^_^

Selections from Open SQL Camp


Open SQL Camp, originally uploaded by krow.

Click through to the flicked set. Drizzle, MySQL, Postgres, Infrobright, SQLite, and other database developers were in attendance.

OpenSQL Camp is in full swing!

(one note, I have updated a previous blog post by adding the video for the LISA presentation I gave entitled “How to Stop Hating MySQL”)

OpenSQL Camp is in full swing! Baron Schwartz has done an amazing job organizing this free unconference.

We are well into the 2nd session of the day, and the quality of the presentations is excellent (though I expected that!) and it is always great to see people.

Some pictures….
(more…)

Brian Aker, Keynote, Open SQL Camp (Summary)

Is the projector on? Apparently the projector is lying, there are red lights and screams of "cut the blue one". And suddenly there was light.

The keynote is on the "State of Open Source Databases (just where are we?)", Brian Aker is now with Drizzle at Sun/MySQL.

Summarizing as much of Brian as possible (apologies Brian if I missed anything important):

We have achieved ubiquity - Skype, Google... open source databases are entirely ubiquitous. There is no question about when we will "win" -- we have already won. 

As technology has gone for the increase of computing with CPUs following Moore's Law, and as we have more cores now and databases need to scale on more cores and how can databases use all these cores. What about other types of machines, xbox's etc.?

As time moves on, the amount of data expansion is happening very rapidly. Smugmug, LSST and the Large Hadron …

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A week of community.

A summary of a week of travels while I wait for the Open SQL Camp to start with Brian Aker's "State of the Union" Keynote.

Monday


Monday started in Columbus, Ohio spending an excellent two days with Jay Pipes and his family while I received "on-the-job" training from Jay. We had discussions of the importance of MySQL ubiquity, "magic" code and a stirring analysis of blob storage in databases compared to stuffing cows in fridges.

Wednesday


From Columbus I headed off to New York to meet Giuseppe "Datacharmer" Maxia during his US North East Tour (in-progress). The hotel room was literally a closet, but it  was right next to Times Square and the Sun offices on Park Avenue (fully stocked with coffee and tea). I discovered Giuseppe outside …

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How to Stop Hating MySQL

At LISA 2008, I gave a presentation entitled "How to Stop Hating MySQL: Fixing Common Mistakes and Myths".

The presentation slides can be downloaded as a PDF at:

http://technocation.org/files/doc/stophatingmysql.pdf

View the video online at http://technocation.org/node/646/play or download the 202.5 MB Flash video file (.flv) directly at http://technocation.org/node/646/download.

Here are some notes and links I referred to:

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Initial day at OpenSQL Camp

So, I actually started my trip early, the taxi picked me up from my house in Malta at 5:15am, and after a short stop in the lounge for some breakfast, I boarded KM100 bound for Heathrow. After a layover there, I eventually arrived at Dulles International, and there was no queue for US customs and border patrol!

Picked up the rental car and drove the 101 miles to Charlottesville, VA — in dense fog.

Met with Sheeri and talked for a bit on Thursday, before just falling asleep, due to time difference and the long travel.

So on Friday, we had a few hours to run errands and pick up last minute stuff that we had forgot back home and so on, before the start at 6pm. Met up with everyone, had some nice interesting conversations and towards the end of the night, 14 of us decided that it was time for dinner, so we went over to a local restaurant. Lots of …

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Sun's Restructuring, personal impact, still employeed

Sun announced a significant layoff and restructuring yesterday, shedding between 5K and 6K staff, out of 30K. 20% is significant.

Lots of people, including friends and family, have asked what effect it has had on me.

Not much. What I have been doing at Sun is unaffected, and what I plan on doing at Sun is unaffected. The database groups (e.g. MySQL) aren't getting reduced beyond normal post-aquisition attrition, and in fact, the database groups are still hiring. Not hiring as easily, since instead of our older system where a PM decides he needs someone, gets permission, looks at some candidates, and then just hires someone anywhere in the world and puts them to work, here at Sun we have to work thru a byzantine and slow "hiring process" that much more painful and not nearly as smoothly international. But, we are still hiring.

If you want to be a developer on MySQL, or provide support, or do remote DBA …

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At OpenSQLCamp, Day Zero

I'm at OpenSQLCamp this weekend.

Just like every traveller eventually has to do ORD at a dead run (BTDT), every traveller has to deal with DC commuter exodus traffic. And that's what I did last night. I got out of the gig at the Intelset Building Complex in DC at 5, and started the drive to Charlottesville VA. Google Maps said it would take 1.5 hours. The Nuvi in my rental car started out saying 2 hours. But it kept adding more time, and in the end, it took 3, plus 20 minutes of trying to find a place to park. The traffic avoidance in the Nuvi kept me off the freeway, and put me on the Lee Highway, so that was nearly 80 miles of hitting a stoplight every few miles.

Let's say I really needed the glasses of wine I enjoyed when I arrived.


The who's who crew of MySQL is here. Sheeri met me at the door. After …

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