![]() ![]() You can already do this in the cloud (AWS/Azure/GCP), but now Microsoft will rent you the licenses on premises, too. O0r3OtJZYhĨ:39AM: Rohan acknowledges that some companies aren’t moving to the cloud yet, or can’t due to country regulations.Ĩ:40AM: Announcing a new pay-as-you-go SQL Server licensing model. #PASSDataCommunitySummit attendees will get the SQL Server 2022 shirt is wearing o stage. It reminds me of how database mirroring wasn’t supported until a service pack came out. That’s a bummer because it’s one of the most widely anticipated features, but at the same time, you don’t wanna use something that complex until it’s ready. The bidirectional disaster recovery capability of the Link feature for Azure SQL Managed Instance is available in limited public preview.?General availability will occur at a future date. In the footnotes of the release post, Microsoft notes: Scott Holiday was the only person to guess 5 (closest without going over), so he wins.Ĩ:36AM: Failover to Managed Instances isn’t ready yet. Nobody actually guessed 6 in the proper date format, at least. Here’s the full release post.Ĩ:30AM: The winner of my Guess the Release Date Contest is interesting. That’s not coming from the keynote – that’s from a blog that probably went live a few minutes too early. Keynotes are useful for vendor education, and as rapidly as things keep changing, people need Azure education.Ĩ:26AM: SQL Server 2022 is generally available now. Rohan: “While all of you are familiar with the star player, SQL Server…” Not a bad way to segue into saying, “I’m gonna talk about Azure stuff because you already know SQL Server.” That’s fair. Watching take the stage at #PassDataCommumitySummit. (Seriously, this is more true than y’all might know – several speakers I’ve talked to have said, “I totally forgot things I used to routinely bring to events, and I forgot how I used to pack.”Ĩ:20: Rohan Kumar, Microsoft’s Corporate Vice President of Azure Data, takes the stage. 1jYqGQ1Kn2Ĩ:15: Amusing behind-the-scenes videos of people traveling to their first in-person event in years. Kate Dugan, Redgate’s Chief Marketing Officer, welcoming everyone to the #PassDataCommumitySummit. (The WiFi is overloaded, so I’m probably not going to be able to upload photos of things as they unfold.) YF2ca7pET7Ĩ:10 Kate Duggan, Chief Marketing Officer for Redgate, took the stage to welcome everyone and talk about how big the event is. #PassDataCommumitySummit keynote setting up. (I know, I know, I should just leave it running.)Ĩ:02AM: The doors opened, and attendees are pouring in. I’ve used Azure Data Studio on my Mac for quite a while, but the speed improvements will be very welcome because startup time has been pretty slow. The keynote hasn’t started yet, but I just noticed that got published today, and I wouldn’t be surprised if it was mentioned onstage. It’s now compiled natively for ARM, so it’s faster. You can refresh the post to follow along – the most current notes will be at the bottom, so if you’re reading later, you can read through the recap as it happened.ħ:30AM: Registration is open! So cool to see it back in the same spot, like coming home.ħ:40AM: Azure Data Studio v1.4 brings Apple Silicon support. I’ll be live-blogging the keynote, sharing my thoughts about what happens. ![]() Instead, the Day 1 keynote is usually used to remind folks who don’t stay quite as in-tune with the news as you do, dear reader – not everybody’s savvy enough to read my blog. You shouldn’t expect outright surprises for SQL Server 2022 – as in, “Hey, here’s an all-new feature for SQL Server 2022 that we’re announcing for the first time!” After all, we’ve already got Release Candidate 1. It’s reasonable to expect these things to finally be revealed – or if not, perhaps a rename to SQL Server 2023. There’s less than 60 days left in the year 2022, and we still don’t have a release date, pricing, or Standard vs Enterprise feature lists for SQL Server 2022. Customer success stories from companies who’ve been using the products prior to their official release.Reminders of recent Microsoft data features.Historically, the Summit’s day 1 keynote has covered: Rohan is the corporate vice president of Microsoft Azure Data, and he’ll likely be introducing lots of other Microsoft folks to cover things during the keynote. Microsoft’s Rohan Kumar is kicking things off this morning as we speak with the Day 1 keynote. I’m really excited – this is like a family reunion for me. This is the first in-person Summit since the pandemic, and the first since Redgate took over ownership from the old PASS organization. I’m in Seattle for the biggest annual gathering of Microsoft data platform professionals, the PASS Data Community Summit. ![]()
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