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Observations by Kaj Arnö @Sun

Archive for the ‘MySQL Workbench’ Category

8mm observations from this mornings MySQL UC Keynotes

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

Allow me to provide some relaxed photographic observations from this morning’s MySQL UC keynotes.

Warning 1: My view is distorted, by my favourite lens, Sigma 8mm.

Warning 2: I took the pics with a shaky hand in low light, so they’re not sharp ones, of the James Duncan Davidson type (the guy who takes all the great pics for O’Reilly).

On Johnny Good’s command, doors open, and the audience starts pouring in.

Zack Urlocker has challenged me in the James Callis Lookalike Contest (of Battlestar Galactica fame), but is himself clearly in the lead.

Journalist James Niccolai of IDG, taking a picture of Rich Green and Mårten Mickos (Note: I am a fan of recursion; it would have been even better if Zack had taken a picture of me taking a picture of James, Rich and Mårten).


Mårten Mickos talking to Sheeri Kritzer Cabral.


Jay Pipes’s head is moving so fast talking to Gina Blaber of O’Reilly, that it gets blurred.


James Duncan Davidson, one of my two favourite contemporary American photographers. The other one is Julian Cash, whose fault it is that I now have a Sigma 8mm lens. He takes weird pictures with his fisheye lens (way weirder — and, above all, better — than mine), and now he has turned his interest into something he calls light painting. Speaking of Julian: He is here. Do come to the Bayshore Room (on the Mezzanine level of the hotel) tomorrow between 10am and 2pm, and have your weird picture taken!


Me showing my favourite gadget (remember? the 8mm fisheye lens) to Jonathan Schwartz; Rich Green and Mike Zinner look suspicious.


Everyone has found their way in and we’re ready to go!


Mårten complains he got only 35 minutes, of which Jay had already burned 5 when Mårten got on stage.

Sheeri Kritzer Cabral’s video camera recording Mårten.


Mårten asked everyone in the audience who had reported bugs to stand up.


Mike Zinner wearing a MySQL Workbench t-shirt doing his great demoes, with an amount of superlatives that is more American than Austrian (prompting Mårten to mention that Mike could have an alternate career in Hollywood; perhaps, later, Mike could run for governor somewhere).

Ah, did you note that MySQL Workbench went GA and is ready for download today? At least Mike Hillyer did. And of course Patrik Backman did, but it would be strange if he didn’t, as he is Mike Zinner’s boss.


Mårten Mickos and his SunVisor Rich Green (Note 1: Rich Green doesn’t want Mårten to call him “boss”. Note 2: A “SunVisor” is a helpful person working for Sun Microsystems that adopts an employee of an acquired company to guide him through the first rough times with a new employer).


James Duncan Davidson taking pictures of award winners.


The Community Award Winners between Rich Green and Mårten Mickos: Diego Medina, Baron Schwartz, Sheeri Kritzer Cabral.


How bright (not)! I didn’t take any well-lit pictures of Jonathan. Perhaps because his captivating presentation kept me focusing on the content? But I did take this picture of the stage when Jonathan explained the world map in blue and green dots. The light blue dots depicted places downloading MySQL. And if you look really carefully in the top-left corner of this picture, you’ll see green dots. That’s the US East Coast, and Europe, which are eager at downloading the GlassFish application server for Java EE.


Today’s keynotes were concluded by Werner Vogels, Amazon CTO, on “The Power of Infrastructure as a Service”.

Posted in Events, MySQL, MySQL Users Conferences, MySQL Workbench, Photography | No Comments »

MySQL Workbench: Check out our ER/DB design tool!

Wednesday, March 26th, 2008

MySQL Workbench, the successor to DBDesigner 4 from FabForce, is a visual database design tool that integrates database design, modeling, creation and maintenance into a single, seamless environment for the MySQL database system. You can use it to design and create new database schemas, document existing databases and even perform complex migrations to MySQL.

It’s now a good week ago since our first Release Candidate numbered 5.0.15, and if you haven’t checked it out yet, now is a good time!

References:

  • Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MySQL_Workbench
  • MySQL Forge: http://forge.mysql.com/wiki/MySQL_Workbench
  • My Workbench blog entry from Nov 2007, on the Beta Release: http://blogs.mysql.com/kaj/2007/11/26/designing-databases-with-mysql-workbench/
  • MySQL Forums :: MySQL Workbench: http://forums.mysql.com/list.php?113
  • MySQL DevZone :: MySQL Workbench Developer Central: http://dev.mysql.com/workbench/
  • MySQL Workbench Downloads: http://dev.mysql.com/downloads/workbench/5.0.html

Posted in MySQL, MySQL Workbench | 1 Comment »

Navigating categories within my blog

Saturday, December 15th, 2007

With 130 entries in the “MySQL” category and no MySQL-related subcategories, my blog had become impossible to search and navigate easily.

And thus I created a number of new categories for the MySQL entries within my blog. They’re listed in the left navigation bar, below the months, as well as below:

  • MySQL Server, MySQL Cluster, Falcon
  • Connectors: PHP, Ruby on Rails
  • Tools: GUI, MySQL Workbench, MySQL Proxy
  • Events: MySQL Users Conferences
  • Licensing: GPL
  • Architecture of Participation, Summer of Code, Virtual company
  • Other: Release Policy, Documentation, Use cases

I hope this will make my blog more (re)usable.

(The picture is from this summer, when navigating the way up the Großvenediger, a 3662 m high mountain in the Hohe Tauern region of Austria.)

Posted in Architecture of Participation, Connectors, Documentation, Events, Falcon, GPL, GUI, Licensing, MySQL, MySQL Cluster, MySQL Proxy, MySQL Server, MySQL Users Conferences, MySQL Workbench, PHP, Release Policy, Ruby on Rails, Summer of Code, Use cases, Virtual company | No Comments »

Designing databases with MySQL Workbench

Monday, November 26th, 2007

A week ago, Mike Zinner and his team released the beta version of MySQL Workbench on http://dev.mysql.com/workbench/. MySQL Workbench is a visual database design tool that is developed by MySQL. It is the successor application of the DBDesigner4 project.

There are two different editions of MySQL Workbench at this point in time - an open source edition and a standard edition that is only available for paying customers.

This means that MySQL Workbench introduces a new concept for MySQL. Until now, MySQL products have either been open source or only available through a commercial subscription (such as MySQL Enterprise Monitor).

MySQL Workbench is the first MySQL product that will be offered in several different editions. For those interested in the logic of this decision, please read Mike Zinner’s post that may help you better understand. Mike compresses the difference as follows:

If you are a MySQL expert who has the knowledge and time to manually perform some steps, MySQL Workbench OSS will be the ideal choice for you. If you want to be able to do more in less time, you would like to have the additional safety-net or you simply want to give something back to the MySQL team - the Standard Edition is your logical choice.

The open source edition of MySQL Workbench is a fully featured, non-crippled database schema designer.. The open source edition is the code base the commercial edition is built on. It has the full feature set that is needed to efficiently design database schemata and is not crippled in any way. The commercial editions only adds modules to the open source edition to help the user save time.

The commercial edition of MySQL Workbench adds a number of advanced modules that help users to work more efficiently with the tool. These modules range from workflow optimizations to extended object handling. But you cannot buy it just yet. Commercial editions of MySQL Workbench will only be offered when they have reached production quality. The Standard Edition will be available on the MySQL online shop. Until then we welcome people joining the Beta Testing Program. If you are interested please email workbench at mysql dot com, and interact with the Workbench developers on the Workbench Forum and IRC channels.

Finally, we expect to be able to create a contributor community around MySQL Workbench. Regardless if you submit a patch for a bug or a new plugin to automate a given task - all users of the MySQL Workbench will benefit from your contribution. And in return you will benefit from the work that has done by other community members. You can start by reporting bugs and answer questions on the Workbench forum. And avid members of the MySQL Workbench community get a copy of the Standard Edition in return.

MySQL Workbench will be available on Windows, Linux and OS X. However, the first release will be on the Windows platform only. Support for other platforms will be added in a short time frame due to the clear separation of back-end and front-end code. Linux and OS X will benefit from the stabilized back-end code and are treated as first class platforms.

Condensed version: MySQL Workbench is a database design tool ready for you to download!

Posted in GUI, MySQL, MySQL Workbench | 1 Comment »

OSCON Lightning Talk: “State of the Dolphin”

Friday, July 27th, 2007

Today at OSCON, MySQL co-founder Michael “Monty” Widenius and I presented the “State of the Dolphin” lightning talk.

My slides for this preso weren’t too graphic, which makes them all the easier to reuse in this blog:

Use our new software!

  • Use MySQL 5.1, it‘s soon going RC
  • Use Falcon, it‘s soon going Beta (new transactional storage engine, faster than InnoDB on large servers)
  • Use MySQL Workbench (ER Tool), Now Beta
  • Use MySQL Proxy, just released
  • PHPers: Use mysqlnd (Native Driver)

Go test MySQL 5.1!

  • We‘re happy with the quality
    • More stable than 5.0 was four months after GA
    • RC happening very soon, GA within a few versions after that
    • A better MySQL 5.0 (thousands of small fixes)
  • We‘re happy with the new functionality
    • Table / Index Partitioning
    • Row-based replication – Transfers data instead of commands
    • Full-text indexing parser plugins – Flexible full text search
    • Disk-based Data Support for MySQL Cluster
    • Replication Support for MySQL Cluster
    • XPath Support - helps any customer wanting to better navigate and search XML documents stored in MySQL
    • Internal Task Scheduler (Events)

Other goodies coming soon (5.2, 6.0, …)

  • Global Backup API
  • Falcon and Maria (MyISAM++) storage engine
  • Further new storage engines
  • Hash & Merge joins (faster subselects)
  • Federated tables over ODBC
  • Foreign key support for all engines

Participate in our Development!

  • Report bugs! Test them! Submit patches!
  • Hang out on Freenode IRC #mysql-dev
  • Subscribe to commits@lists.mysql.com to see our code reviews
  • Attend MySQL University, the foremost education for MySQL developers (of C/C++ code, not apps)
  • MySQL Forge: List your MySQL apps! Upload your code snippets! Fix the missing documents!
  • Go visit MySQL Forge Worklog
    • Voting for best features starting soon

Hiring!

We are hiring outstanding C/C++ developers with systems or database engineering experience.
Visit www.mysql.com/jobs or email resume to jpugh@mysql.com

Posted in Architecture of Participation, Events, Falcon, MySQL, MySQL Proxy, MySQL Server, MySQL Workbench, PHP, Release Policy | No Comments »

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