Tag Archive: writing

My Weekly Bookmarks for October 16th

Here’s my bookmarked links for the week ending Friday, October 16th:

PASS Election Links

PASS Summit Links

SQL Server Links

IT Links

The Junk Drawer

These bookmarks are automatically imported from my bookmarks at Delicious.com. If you’d like to get up-to-the-minute updates on what I’m bookmarking, you can subscribe to my bookmark RSS feed.

Brent Ozar

Brent specializes in performance tuning for SQL Server, VMware, and storage. He's one of the very few Microsoft Certified Masters of SQL Server, a published author, and a Microsoft MVP. He likes travel, Jeeps, Apple gear, jokes, and writing about himself in the third person. Read more and contact Brent.

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My Weekly Bookmarks for October 9th

Here’s my bookmarked links for October 2nd through October 9th:

SQL Server Links

Tech Links

The Junk Drawer

  • I Love That Game – Brilliant criminal minds at work.
  • Twitter Data Analysis: An Investor’s Perspective – A bunch of oddball stats about Twitter users and their histories.
  • Will Work for Whuffie? – Why you have to charge fees for speaking engagements when you hit a certain level of fame. (No, I’m not there yet, hahaha, but even if I was, my speaking engagements are free because I’m a service of Quest Software. No, not that kind of “service,” buddy.)

These bookmarks are automatically imported from my bookmarks at Delicious.com. If you’d like to get up-to-the-minute updates on what I’m bookmarking, you can subscribe to my bookmark RSS feed.

Brent Ozar

Brent specializes in performance tuning for SQL Server, VMware, and storage. He's one of the very few Microsoft Certified Masters of SQL Server, a published author, and a Microsoft MVP. He likes travel, Jeeps, Apple gear, jokes, and writing about himself in the third person. Read more and contact Brent.

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My Weekly Bookmarks for October 2nd

Here’s my bookmarked links for September 25th through October 2nd:

SQL Server, Cloud, and Tech Links

Writing, Blogging and Networking Links

The Junk Drawer

These bookmarks are automatically imported from my bookmarks at Delicious.com. If you’d like to get up-to-the-minute updates on what I’m bookmarking, you can subscribe to my bookmark RSS feed.

Brent Ozar

Brent specializes in performance tuning for SQL Server, VMware, and storage. He's one of the very few Microsoft Certified Masters of SQL Server, a published author, and a Microsoft MVP. He likes travel, Jeeps, Apple gear, jokes, and writing about himself in the third person. Read more and contact Brent.

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Bookmarks for September 25th

These are my recent favorite links:

Unfortunately, there’s more, but the WordPress plugin I’m using will only import 15 bookmarks per hour. Grumble. To see the full list of what I’ve been reading lately, either check out my Delicious bookmarks or subscribe to my Google Reader feed.

Brent Ozar

Brent specializes in performance tuning for SQL Server, VMware, and storage. He's one of the very few Microsoft Certified Masters of SQL Server, a published author, and a Microsoft MVP. He likes travel, Jeeps, Apple gear, jokes, and writing about himself in the third person. Read more and contact Brent.

Website - Twitter - Facebook - More Posts

My Weekly Bookmarks for September 17th

Posting this one a little early since I’ll be doing presentations all day tomorrow for a Quest Day with the Experts in Boston, MA.  You can watch online too.

SQL Server & Tech Links

The Junk Drawer

  • Blur Tripod – iPhone tripod adapter and an app that has a built-in delay after you click to take a photo – that way the phone stops moving and the photo will be crisp.
  • Professional Development: Internet Image – When someone tells you that you should have a nice, clean, sanitized blog that’s free of any personal details, send them this blog by Jason Massie. I’m right there with him – I would rather see someone’s personality. People are likable – Books Online is not.
  • Trackin’ Away – Ping.fm now lets you track statistics on your broadcasted links. Yet another reason to use the PingPressFM plugin for WordPress.
  • Training Benefits – When you stop training, your career comes to a grinding halt.
  • Your Own Personal Development Plan – End-of-year reviews are coming up – time to start working on your Personal Development Plan.
  • Recording a webcast for Quest Connect 2009 – Colin Stasiuk talks about the upcoming free QuestConnect webcast.
  • Your company? There’s an app for that. – Many companies are going to be competing with dirt-cheap iPhone applications sooner or later.

These bookmarks are automatically imported from my bookmarks at Delicious.com. If you’d like to get up-to-the-minute updates on what I’m bookmarking, you can subscribe to my bookmark RSS feed.

Brent Ozar

Brent specializes in performance tuning for SQL Server, VMware, and storage. He's one of the very few Microsoft Certified Masters of SQL Server, a published author, and a Microsoft MVP. He likes travel, Jeeps, Apple gear, jokes, and writing about himself in the third person. Read more and contact Brent.

Website - Twitter - Facebook - More Posts

Plagiarism, Contracts, and You

It was bound to happen sooner or later, and this week, it did: SQLServerPedia got its first complaint about plagiarism.  We were contacted by a well-known author (we’ll call him Author #1) and his publishing firm who had noticed a disturbing similarity between a chapter in their book and a group of SQLServerPedia wiki articles.

As an author struggling to bang out pages for an upcoming book, I know firsthand just how much work is involved in the process.  I can just imagine how elated I’m going to be the first time I see my name in the shelves of a bookstore.  (Unless it’s in the clearance bin, and if it is, I’m going to pick up the books and move them into the full-price section.)  I can also imagine how frustrating it would be to see my work on another site without my permission.  I vowed to the author that I’d get to the bottom of it as soon as possible, and we started our investigation.

We pulled the articles in question off SQLServerPedia and set about digging through our records at Quest Software to find Author #2, the person who’d contributed it.  The wiki’s initial content was populated from a paid product called KnowledgeXpert, which had been written by several contracted authors.  Our first guess was that someone had copied the content from this famous book and passed it off as their own.

What Really Happened

Here’s where things get a little strange:

  • Author #2 wrote the articles for Quest Software.  His contract with Quest allowed him to keep the material for his own use too, and he could use it in seminars and books.
  • Author #2 modified the articles, and contributed them to a book for Author #1.
  • Author #1 noticed the similarity and asked us to take ours down.

From Quest’s perspective, it’s fine: we contracted for the material, and we had the rights to use it in the wiki.  We don’t need to sue anyone, and it’s completely okay that it’s used in the book too.  We applaud anyone who can make a buck off their content as long as the contract is written up to protect everyone.

Things might not be so clear for Author #1 and his publisher, though.  Depending on the publisher’s contract, they may have demanded all-new, all-original works for their book.  I hope for the authors and the publisher that it works out well, but…

You Need to Read Your Contracts

As a blogger or author, whenever you write something for anybody, you need to ask a few basic questions:

  • Who will own this work when I’m done? Do I own it, or does the publisher?  The answer varies from contract to contract – for example, when I write whitepapers for Quest or books for Wiley, they own the content.  Some magazines or web sites, however, will let you continue to own the content.
  • Can I use this work in other places? This is a valid question whether you own the content or not – some publishers, like mine, will allow me to reuse the content as long as I properly attribute it to my book and my publisher.  Some web sites will let you republish your work later, but they want a 90-day exclusive first for their readers.
  • Can I reuse work I’ve written previously? Can you repurpose your blog entries, whitepapers, wiki articles, and so forth for this book or article?

It’s so important to understand the basic rights behind your content.  Here on the blog, I copyright my stuff because it’s how I make my living.  If somebody took my content and charged for a book of it, I’d be pretty pissed off.  However, in my photo stream on Flickr, I license all of my photos under Creative Commons: people can reuse and remix my photos as long as they give me credit, and as long as they license their own work under that same license.  Someone can’t take one of my photos, remix it, and then copyright it.  I do this because if someone wants to use one of my photos in a presentation or a demo, that’s completely fine with me.  I don’t make a living off my photography, and it’s a good thing, or else I’d be living on Ramen Noodles.

You Need to Own the Rights to Your Content

Times are changing in the publishing industry.  Kindles, iPods and Google Books are starting to affect publishers somewhat like Napster and MP3 players affected the recording industry.  Thankfully, there’s not a lot of negative feelings piled up against the book industry, but it’s still a time of flux and change.

Imagine a future where anyone can be their own publisher, and anyone can place their material in Amazon.com for sale on the Kindle for $.99.  I can easily see myself paying $5 for an electronic to-go copy of The Bloggess‘s greatest hits, especially if it included her favorite comments on each entry.  Sometimes the comments are even better than the article, but you don’t want to sift through the hundreds of comments – having her prune the best ones would be worth the price of entry.

That business model only works if you own your own content.

I beat this drum over and over: I emphasize blogging under your own domain name, I emphasize using syndication to gain readers, and now I’m telling you to pay very close attention to the contracts you sign for your content.

Brent Ozar

Brent specializes in performance tuning for SQL Server, VMware, and storage. He's one of the very few Microsoft Certified Masters of SQL Server, a published author, and a Microsoft MVP. He likes travel, Jeeps, Apple gear, jokes, and writing about himself in the third person. Read more and contact Brent.

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It was a dark and stormy night…

and I was hunched over my trusty, battered Macbook Pro, sipping whiskey by the backlit keys when the email came in. I got worried as soon I saw the sender, because Big Jimmy May is what they call a “Performance Consultant”. Before I even opened the email, I called my bookie to make sure my checks had all cleared. I’ve only got two kneecaps, and they’re already bad enough just from poundin’ the street looking for info. Thankfully, I was in the clear, so I read the email.

Jimmy said a fella by the name of Christian Bolton was knocking on doors looking for help with a particularly nasty job: exposing the dark, hidden secrets of SQL Server engine internals. To make matters worse, Christian wanted to combine two of my least favorite words: trouble and shooting. Jimmy would have taken the case himself, but he had a job he had to handle in Turkey, and you know how those Turkish jobs go.

Next thing you know, there’s a contract going around out there with my name on it – not to mention things like deadlines.  It’s a dirty business, I tell you.

The book authoring process stands in stark contrast to my normal blog entry process: instead of banging out a few ill-advised (but often spell-checked) paragraphs in half an hour and posting it for the world to see, I have technical editors and technical reviewers. They’re like blog commenters, only they have the authority to modify my work BEFORE you see it instead of AFTER. And of course, to see that work, you’re going to have to fork out some moolah.

I’m writing two chapters, covering storage and on the Performance Dashboard Reports, and I wanted to ask you, dear reader – what would you want to see in a Storage chapter?  Rather than showing 35 full-page diagrams of the Container Store’s goodies, I figured I’d cover these topics:

Types of Storage

There’s several types of storage that affect the way we make architecture decisions and perform troubleshooting. I’ll cover the basics of each and what their ramifications are:

  • Locally Attached Storage
  • Storage Area Networks (and touch on multipathing)
  • Virtual Servers (how VMware and Hyper-V change storage designs)
  • Project Madison (scale-out, shared-nothing nodes)
  • Using SQLIO to test storage throughput

Things that Change Storage

  • Compression
  • Transparent Data Encryption
  • Partitioning (of objects like tables & indexes, not disk partitions)
  • Partition Alignment (that’s where the disk stuff comes in)

What We Store

  • Data
  • Full Text Indexes
  • Filestreams
  • Logs
  • TempDB

Any requests? I still have to arrange this stuff in a way that flows, and don’t be surprised if I left off something huge.  I came up with this list on a cruise ship, people.  Just be glad it doesn’t include “margarita on the rocks” or “cigars”.

Don’t look for a fast turnaround – the book won’t be out until early 2010. Like I said, this is a lot different than publishing a blog entry! Along the way, I’ll be blogging about the process so you can get an inside peek at how it works – things like the contract, my brilliant coauthors, the writing, the reviewers & editors, and so on.  That way, when you see it on the shelves of your local bookseller, you’ll be able to explain to the proprietor exactly why they should burn it.

So if you’ll excuse me, I need to go buy my bookie a Christmas present. Now that I know Jimmy May has my email address, I can’t be too careful.

Brent Ozar

Brent specializes in performance tuning for SQL Server, VMware, and storage. He's one of the very few Microsoft Certified Masters of SQL Server, a published author, and a Microsoft MVP. He likes travel, Jeeps, Apple gear, jokes, and writing about himself in the third person. Read more and contact Brent.

Website - Twitter - Facebook - More Posts