(Nisarg Upadhyay) In my previous article, I have briefly covered database statistics, its importance, and why statistics should be updated.
Other News
Naive Bayes Prediction in SQL Server
(Dinesh Asanka) In this article, we will walk through Microsoft Naive Bayes algorithm in SQL Server.
BMC AMI for DevOps Intelligently Integrates Db2 for z/OS Schema Changes
(Craig S. Mullins) Organizations of all types and sizes have adopted a DevOps approach to building applications because it effectively implements small and frequent code changes using agile development techniques.
jOOQ 3.12 Released With a new Procedural Language API
(lukaseder) In this release, we’ve focused on a lot of minor infrastructure tasks, greatly improving the overall quality of jOOQ.
Ruby on Rails on Windows is not just possible, it’s fabulous using WSL2 and VS Code
(Scott Hanselman) I’ve been trying on and off to enjoy Ruby on Rails development on Windows for many years. I was doing Ruby on Windows as long as 13 years ago. There’s been many valiant efforts to make Rails on Windows a good experience.
Role Based Security in an ASP.NET Core Application
(Mahesh Sabnis) ASP.NET Core provides necessary APIs to implement secure access to an application.In this tutorial, we will see how to implement Role-Base security in an ASP.NET Core 2.2 application.
What Are gRPC Web Services and When Should I Use Them?
(Peter Vogel) ASP.NET Core allows you to create Web Services based on gRPC … which raises two questions: “What is gRPC?” and “Does it ever make sense to use it?”
Setting World-Writable File Permissions Prior to Preparing the Backup Can Break It
(Jaime Sicam) It’s bad practice to provide world-writable access to critical files in Linux, though we’ve seen time and time again that this is done to conveniently share files with other users, applications, or services.
Oracle database 18c yum installation on Oracle linux 7.6
(Mohamed Azar) I have downloaded the oracle database 18c rpm package from oracle and have plan to install manually without ULN support.
GROUPING SETS and COLLECT Don’t Get Along
(Oren Nakdimon) I’ve recently got reminded that assuming something will work, just because it makes sense, doesn’t mean it will really work.
