Arthur Fuller
fuller.artful at gmail.com
Sat Sep 17 20:52:34 CDT 2011
There are some nice things about MySQL but on the other hand I definitely do not like where Oracle is going with this puppy since its acquisition of Sun and by inheritance MySQL. I'm still on the fence about these developments, but quite frankly I am leaning against Oracle on all these transmutations of what was originally a simple, straightforward approach. At last recollection, Monty has departed, and with him, I fear, has the guiding vision of this product. Frankly, I am all over the place on where next to go: I look at Mongo and see it exquisite for web-apps but not for OLTP situations. I look at PostGreSQL and think it's got a bunch of things right. I look at Oracle and MS-SQL and think they have some things right as well. I frankly do not have any clue into which basket to toss my next eggs. Arthur On Sat, Sep 17, 2011 at 7:51 PM, Stuart McLachlan <stuart at lexacorp.com.pg>wrote: > I run MySQL locally as part of a WAMP installation and remotely on our > FreeBSD servers. > > I use phpMyAdmin for all the administration. It's a very intuitive > interface. > > It's possibly worth installing WAMP just for the phpMyAdmin. > > -- > Stuart > > > On 17 Sep 2011 at 19:24, jwcolby wrote: > > > For now I have to figure out how to create a database. Is it the same > > concept as SQL Server? A file or set of files where tables, indexes, > > views etc are stored? I assumed there would be some visual designer > > that would allow me to create the db, then tables etc. It looks like > > that stuff is in "SQL Development". > > > > This thing looks pretty nice, but very different on the surface. > > > > > _______________________________________________ > dba-SQLServer mailing list > dba-SQLServer at databaseadvisors.com > http://databaseadvisors.com/mailman/listinfo/dba-sqlserver > http://www.databaseadvisors.com > >