Search Results

Search found 40339 results on 1614 pages for 'best settings'.

Page 561/1614 | < Previous Page | 557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565 566 567 568  | Next Page >

  • Are you a SQLBits attendee? get a discount for PASS Europe SQL 2008 R2 Launch

    - by simonsabin
    PASS have given use a number of prizes for SQLBits. We have registrations for PASS Europe and PASS North America as well as DVD sets of the sessions from the North America summit last year to give away. Not only that, if you want to go to PASS Europe and you are a SQLBits user then you can get a promotion code that not only gives you the best price it also raises money for SQLBits. To get the promotion code login and then visit the community page http://www.sqlbits.com/about/Community.aspx  

    Read the article

  • Increasing Your Google Website Ranking

    Your Google website ranking is directly related to the amount of traffic that comes into your site. Without being displayed on the site, which is the most dominant search engine on the internet, even the best planned SEO campaign can go down the drain. Learning to "make friends" with Google and work within its rules can lead to a far higher profit margin.

    Read the article

  • 5 Open Source Wi-Fi Hotspot Solutions

    <b>LinuxPlanet: </b>"Whether you're wanting to give away or charge your visitors for the wireless Internet, you should find something that will work. The best part is that most of these solutions are free -- you don't have to spends hundreds on a off-the-shelf hotspot gateway."

    Read the article

  • Can I associate a github gist with an organization?

    - by yc01
    My team has a GitHub organization account. A lot of the work I do results in one-off scripts that we want to be able to have on our organization page, but that aren't big enough projects to justify their own repository. Is there any way to associates Gists with GitHub organization accounts? If not, what's the best way to 'check-in' or associate smaller scripts into Github's shared organizational repository?

    Read the article

  • SQL Server 2012 AlwaysOn: Multisite Failover Cluster Instance

    SQL Server Failover Clustering, which includes support for both local and multisite failover configurations, is part of the SQL Server 2012 AlwaysOn implementation suite, designed to provide high availability and disaster recovery for SQL Server. The multisite failover clustering technology has been enhanced significantly in SQL Server 2012. The multisite failover cluster architecture, enhancements in SQL Server 2012 to the technology, and some best practices to help with deployment of the technology are the primary focus of this paper.

    Read the article

  • Harping on Metadata Performance: New Benchmarks

    <b>Linux Magazine:</b> "Metadata performance is perhaps the most neglected facet of storage performance. In previous articles we&#8217;ve looked into how best to improve metadata performance without too much luck. Could that be a function of the benchmark? Hmmm..."

    Read the article

  • Is there a way to help streamline your typical developers discussions?

    - by Jasper Kennis
    Often, my colleagues and I run into specific problems, for example what's the best way to deploy this, or would this or that technique be a good one to use, or just "hey, have you seen that new thing". However at the moment this communication goes via mail, or skype, or twitter, and a lot of information becomes hard to find very quickly. Is there a service or methodology to keep this kind of information ordered and traceable?

    Read the article

  • Question about Byte-Pairing for data compression [closed]

    - by user1669533
    Question about Byte-Pairing for data compression. If byte pairing converts two byte values to a single byte value, splitting the file in half, then taking a gig file and recusing it 16 times shrinks it to 62,500,000. My question is, is byte-pairing really efficient? Is the creation of a 5,000,000 iteration loop, to be conservative, efficient? I would like some feed back on and some incisive opinions please. Best Regards.

    Read the article

  • Oracle Magazine, March/April 2008

    Oracle Magazine March/April features articles on IT modernization, Marvel Entertainment, SQL performance analyzer, Oracle SQL Developer, upgrade certification to Oracle Database 11g, Oracle Database 11g features, declarative data filters, Oracle Application Express, PL/SQL best practices, and much more.

    Read the article

  • Getting Your Site Ranked High Through SEO

    The best way to get your web-based business noticed is to rank high in the search engine results pages (otherwise known as SERPs). To make this a possibility and not just a dream, you need to establish a copious amount of links from other related sites. Simply put, when people visit these other sites, they'll be able to see a link that directs them to yours.

    Read the article

  • In a pinch, is it worthwhile to run a bootable USB drive for my primary PC for an extended period?

    - by jason
    My hard drive has crashed, and I won't be able to buy a new one for a month or two. I've got a 16GB USB 3.0 flash drive that I'd like to have running a persistent ubuntu or ubuntu gnome distro. While it's not the best solution, is it a solution, or is it just a good way to wear out a flash drive? I plan on mostly storing things in Google Drive, so other than wearing out the flash drive, are there any risks involved?

    Read the article

  • admin-over-clients application

    - by azzido
    I have the same web application running on several different servers. Now I want a central place to administer everything in one web interface. What is the best way to do this? Should I provide a REST interface on every web application and let the admin application make all the calls? This seems like a common problem that's already been solved by smarter people than me. UPDATE: I want to change the application data per web application + see the results per web application

    Read the article

  • Affordable Link Building Service - The Perfect Ranking Solution

    If you have website you want to do whatever you can to make sure that your website is the best that it can be so you take great pains to make sure that everything that's just right. So for this, SEO is very important. Among the fastest growing marketing strategies that can promote your website, is link building that's in your budget.

    Read the article

  • Image captions and wrapping [migrated]

    - by Charles
    What's the best way to add a caption below an image? The image and its caption will be floated right, and the text on the caption needs to wrap -- a 200x200px image shouldn't have a caption of width 800px. I would strongly prefer a solution that allows me to update images (with different widths) without changing the CSS or markup. For reasons beyond my control the image itself will also be floated right, but this should not be too problematic.

    Read the article

  • Implementing SEO Into Your Website

    Every web based business should implement good SEO into their website in order to receive good rate of visitors coming to the website. If you are in California, then getting Orange County SEO services is your best choice, this will help your website to attract more visitors and consequently more sales.

    Read the article

  • Changes in SEO Your Business Needs to Know About

    With the variety of opinions on the changes in search and the best SEO practices, who are we to trust to ensure our websites are ranking high in the SERPs so we can be found by hungry prospects? How do we know what SEO trends to implement and which ones to ignore? Below are three SEO trends worth taking note of.

    Read the article

  • Will Java or C# be a better career choice for the future? [closed]

    - by learner_17
    I am in a tough situation here,and i know this question has been asked a thousand times.I have been asked by an employer to switch to java ,although i am currently working on c# for the last 3-4 months. my dilemna is should i go for it? is java tough?and if i go whats the best way to learn java. And if I dont switch how do i sharpen my c# skills - or should is say my whole grip over the entire .net framework.

    Read the article

  • The Top 4 Link Building Techniques

    Over the last several years, "social bookmarking" has become very popular. Digg.com is the best example of a social bookmarking site. You can submit a link to a webpage and others can vote on it, with the idea that the cream rises to the top and all of the most important stories are shown on the homepage.

    Read the article

  • Are we queueing and serializing properly?

    - by insta
    We process messages through a variety of services (one message will touch probably 9 services before it's done, each doing a specific IO-related function). Right now we have a combination of the worst-case (XML data contract serialization) and best-case (in-memory MSMQ) for performance. The nature of the message means that our serialized data ends up about 12-15 kilobytes, and we process about 4 million messages per week. Persistent messages in MSMQ were too slow for us, and as the data grows we are feeling the pressure from MSMQ's memory-mapped files. The server is at 16GB of memory usage and growing, just for queueing. Performance also suffers when the memory usage is high, as the machine starts swapping. We're already doing the MSMQ self-cleanup behavior. I feel like there's a part we're doing wrong here. I tried using RavenDB to persist the messages and just queueing an identifier, but the performance there was very slow (1000 messages per minute, at best). I'm not sure if that's a result of using the development version or what, but we definitely need a higher throughput[1]. The concept worked very well in theory but performance was not up to the task. The usage pattern has one service acting as a router, which does all reads. The other services will attach information based on their 3rd party hook, and forward back to the router. Most objects are touched 9-12 times, although about 10% are forced to loop around in this system for awhile until the 3rd parties respond appropriately. The services right now account for this and have appropriate sleeping behaviors, as we utilize the priority field of the message for this reason. So, my question, is what is an ideal stack for message passing between discrete-but-LAN'ed machines in a C#/Windows environment? I would normally start with BinaryFormatter instead of XML serialization, but that's a rabbit hole if a better way is to offload serialization to a document store. Hence, my question. [1]: The nature of our business means the sooner we process messages, the more money we make. We've empirically proven that processing a message later in the week means we are less likely to make that money. While performance of "1000 per minute" sounds plenty fast, we really need that number upwards of 10k/minute. Just because I'm giving numbers in messages per week doesn't mean we have a whole week to process those messages.

    Read the article

< Previous Page | 557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565 566 567 568  | Next Page >