PASS 2015 continues (and finishes up today!) in Seattle.
Its been an amazing conference this year with a few things really hitting home;
- Amazing technology announcements around SQL 2016 CTP3
- Incredible advances in almost every component in Azure Data Services
- Full and seamless SQL/Azure ecosystem integration – and by that I mean both On-Prem and/or within the Azure Cloud. The story of either On-Prem or Azure Cloud is compelling enough individually, however the Hybrid story is now a reality for SQL and enables dynamic and flexible architectures well beyond what competitors can offer.
- BUT what astounds me the most is actually the pace of change – barely a day goes by where I don’t receive a new services or feature update related to SQL 2016 CTP3 or Azure.
- I don’t recall a time (in recent memory) where the step changes have come so thick/fast – its certainly changed from where I started as a DBA on RDB/VMS back in 1994 where patches arrived by mail on tape cartridge! 🙂
- (As a quick aside a chief designer on RDB was Jim Gray, the same who joined Microsoft to lead the SQL Server architecture to stardom soon after Oracle bought-out and shelved DEC around 1995+)
Enough reminiscing already – moving along – Today I attended 5 back-back sessions, and again I cannot blog about all of them in the time I have (or want to spend), but the one which stands out the most was Azure SQL Data Warehouse and Integration with the Azure Ecosystem by Drew DiPalma of Microsoft.
This session focused specifically on the Azure ecosystem surrounding the Azure SQL Data Warehouse (SQL DW) and how it can seamlessly interact with other Azure components to create different operational solutions. To me this was very compelling, not necessarily due to the SQL DW technology (which I know well already as the on-prem APS appliance), but more-so as it showed just how easily all parts of Azure can happily work together.



