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SQL Server: Past, Present, and Future

SQL Server: Past, Present, and Future. Dave Fackler President, Atlanta.MDF Director, Intellinet Corporation. Agenda. The past: SQL Server 1.0, 4.2, 6.0, 6.5 The present: SQL Server 7.0, 2000 The future: The Yukon Wave. The Past. The Past: SQL Server 1.0.

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SQL Server: Past, Present, and Future

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  1. SQL Server:Past, Present, and Future Dave Fackler President, Atlanta.MDF Director, Intellinet Corporation

  2. Agenda • The past: SQL Server 1.0, 4.2, 6.0, 6.5 • The present: SQL Server 7.0, 2000 • The future: The Yukon Wave

  3. The Past

  4. The Past: SQL Server 1.0 • Deal forged between Sybase and Microsoft on March 27, 1987 • SQL Server 1.0 released for OS/2 only • SQL Server 1.1 added Windows 3.0 support for the client tools only • Sybase maintained code-base while Microsoft provided sales and support

  5. The Past: SQL Server 4.2 • Released in 1992 • Support added for Windows NT • Minor GUI tools • Most administration, DBA work done via command-line interface (isql) • Microsoft took over code-base, slowly rewriting kernel functions to fix bugs

  6. The Past: SQL Server 6.0 • Released in June 1995 • Focused on replication and usability • Enterprise Manager introduced • Scrollable cursors • DBA “challenges” • Modifying table designs • Referential integrity

  7. The Past: SQL Server 6.5 • Released in April 1996 • Row-level locking during INSERT • ANSI syntax additions • SQL Trace added • Backup of individual tables • Web Assistant Wizard • Still lots of “challenges”

  8. The Present

  9. The Present: SQL Server 7.0 • Development began in 1995 • Beta 2 released in December 1997 • Beta 3 released in June 1998 • Full launch in November 1998 • Complete rewrite of database engine, query optimizer, management tools

  10. The Present: SQL Server 7.0 • Server improvements and new features • Improved administration tools • Architecture enhancements • Server/development enhancements • Data Transformation Services • OLAP Services

  11. The Present: SQL Server 2000 • Development began in 1999 • Released in August 2000 • Often referred to as SQL Server 7.5 or 8.0 • Surpassed most industry expectations • Benchmarks • Scalability/reliability • Feature use (DTS, Analysis Services)

  12. The Present: SQL Server 2000 • Relational database enhancements • XML integration • Administration tools enhancements • Replication improvements • DTS improvements • Analysis Services improvements • Meta Data Services and English Query

  13. The Future(Tell us about Yukon!)

  14. The Future: Yukon • Storage server for all Microsoft Servers • Is WSS dead? • Support for file-system functions • Support for .NET • Common Language Runtime • XML support • Shared-nothing clustering

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