jwcolby
jwcolby at colbyconsulting.com
Thu Mar 27 10:54:09 CDT 2008
Francisco, that is all true. However TONE inserted in the best practices is inflammatory and needs to be addressed. I also think that best practices can and should be carved out into separate threads of their own, as they tend to degrade into debates about the best practices. Another issue is that "best practices" is often just not useful to someone at my level. It is absolutely useful to you, but this is my thread, trying to get an answer to my question. John W. Colby Colby Consulting www.ColbyConsulting.com -----Original Message----- From: dba-sqlserver-bounces at databaseadvisors.com [mailto:dba-sqlserver-bounces at databaseadvisors.com] On Behalf Of Francisco Tapia Sent: Thursday, March 27, 2008 11:12 AM To: Discussion concerning MS SQL Server Subject: Re: [dba-SQLServer] Being helpful John, I've come back to you on the basis that this new thread even has to get started. All posts are welcomed so long as they are ontopic. Read the database asvisors netiquette rules. Best of practices are completly within scope, I see that type of posts on the access list all the time. Because on this list we deal with really big dbs in general, best of practices are completly appropriate. On 3/27/08, jwcolby <jwcolby at colbyconsulting.com> wrote: > Francisco, > > Everyone on this list needs to: > > 1) READ THE QUESTION. > 2) RESPOND TO THE QUESTION, in a manner that is at all likely to be > useful to the person asking the question. > 3) Leave the lectures to a new thread of your own making. > > Francisco, > > You keep coming back to ME. I asked a simple question and got useless > junk and lectures about the right way to do things. I got exactly TWO > responses that were useful and indicated that the respondent even > LOOKED at my question, one from Elizabeth and another from James, both of whom I thanked. > > Robert writes a Doctoral thesis and then inserts crap like "now you > can go learn enough to even be worthy of being here" and you don't say > a word. If you want to be a moderator why don't you step in at the > very beginning and ask the people to respond to the questions in a > useful and civil manner, at a level likely to be useful to the person. > I don't need their lectures, and I don't need yours (and I don't need a Doctoral thesis). > > Please everybody, do not respond to the thread unless you have > actually READ it and are willing to write answers on my level. And > start your own threads if you want to discuss "the right way to" or > "how you should NEVER" or write a Doctoral thesis, or anything else not directly related to my question. > > The question is not answered, though I am certainly on my way, and > have started another thread to discuss it further. > > Thanks, > > John W. Colby > Colby Consulting > www.ColbyConsulting.com