Ok, Arjen, enough with the conference announcements... I'll talk to my boss tomorrow about coming along. The conference is after all only about a 20 minute drive from my new apartment. It might even help to know some more about MySQL.
There was a request to take a gander at the $100 Laptop: One Laptop Per Child (OLPC), and reading Fedora People recently made me want to snap up the opportunity to give it a go. Here are my first impressions on the emulator, known as the OLPC SDK, by Daniel Berrange.
Installation, if instructions are followed on FC-4 work fine. There are spec files to rebuild for FC-5. During the bootup sequence, I noticed that LVM was starting up, and finding no volume groups - can’t this be disabled? There doesn’t seem to be a use for LVM on the OLPC.
Once you get past the fairly slow emulator startup (its qemu based), you’ll notice that at the heart of it, you’ve got FC-5 sitting there. Very sexy.
Looking for a terminal? While gnome-terminal isn’t supplied (and probably will never be), xterm …
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We're pleased to also have Mark Spencer, creater of the Asterisk PBX
software and founder of Digium, at the MySQL Users Conference, 24-27 April (Santa Clara,
CA).
Asterisk is very popular with home users, but big VoIP providers
like Vonage also use Asterisk, and MySQL of course. It's
important infrastructure stuff! Mark's session is entitled
Open Source in VoIP.
(early registration for MySQL UC2006 is until March
6th)
MySQL provides several variations on INSERT and UPDATE to allow inserting and updating exactly the desired data. These features provide a lot of power and flexibility, making MySQL significantly more capable than it otherwise might be. In this article I’ll give an overview of each feature, help you understand how to choose among them, and point out some things to watch out for. Setup I am using MySQL 4.1.15 to create my examples.
First I have to correct myself. In my last blog article I wrote
about a bug (17564) that MySQL remains database privileges
after a database has been renamed. This behaviour is described in
the manual, so it's no bug.
However, this raises an interesting question. Should data
definition statements also affect the privilege settings? If you
for example drop a database or a table, the privileges still
remain for this object. Or if you rename a database or a table,
the privileges will not be set to the new name. Should the
definition statements and the privilege settings be separated, or
handled together?
I would be interested, what other people think about this, what
SQL standard suggests and how other RDBMS handle this. Is this
the default behaviour among the RDBMS, or is it a Gotcha?
Could it be a good idea to add an option to the data …
What's the most outrageous biopiracy case in your country? Who's ripping off indigenous knowledge in your community? Who's monopolizing your genes or patenting your plants? Has anyone trademarked your favorite patron saint? We need your help to identify t
Today I sent out the invitations for the first MySQL User Group Meeting in Hamburg on Monday, the 6th of March at 19:00 o'clock. It will take place in the Chinese Restaurant Ni-Hao in Hamburg-Wandsbek. If you would like to attend, please join our mailing list and stay tuned for further info!
Today I sent out the invitations for the first MySQL User Group Meeting
in Hamburg on Monday, the 6th of March at 19:00 o'clock. It will
take place in the Chinese Restaurant Ni-Hao in Hamburg-Wandsbek. If you would like
to attend, please join our mailing
list and stay tuned for further info!
Tim O'Reilly, founder of O'Reilly Media will be speaking at the upcoming MySQL Users Conference April 24-27 in Santa Clara. Tim's been at the forefront of the open source revolution for as long as it's been called "open source", having helped bring the term into the lexicon after the historic Open Source Summit in April 1998. More recently Tim has helped bring the notion of "Web 2.0" into mainstream discussion.
NerdTV has a great interview with in which Tim discusses how he got started in publishing, founding the first Perl conference, why licensing is a red herring and more.
If you …
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At MySQL Users
Conference 2006, Johan Andersson will be teaching a 3 hour
tutorial on MySQL Cluster. Johan is a cluster expert with a
wealth of practical experience from his daily work as sales
engineer at MySQL AB. If you are thinking about deploying MySQL
Cluster, or just want to learn more about it, this tutorial is
for you.
Early registration for the conference is until March
6th. Tutorials are an optional extra, but the really cool thing
is that during the early reg period, you can get two tutorials
for the price of one! So you can save a lot and learn even more.