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July 30, 2008 12:00 AM

SQL Server Magazine Editors' Best Awards 2008

These products will help you squeeze the most out of SQL Server
SQL Server Pro
InstantDoc ID #99404
Executive Summary: For our 2008 Editors' Best Awards, SQL Server Magazine editors have selected the 12 best products from the hundreds we've learned about in the past year. Developers and administrators who need to squeeze the most out of a Microsoft SQL Server environment will find what they need here.

The SQL Server Magazine Editors’ Best awards honor the outstanding products and services that our editors and contributors have seen over the past year. Every year we research, review, and talk to vendors and readers about dozens of new products, and determining the best of all of them isn’t easy.

After narrowing down all the possibilities to the top contenders in 12 categories, we polled our fellow editors and contributors and asked them to judge each product on three criteria. First, what is the product’s strategic importance to the market? Second, does it offer superlative performance and technical innovation? And finally, does it provide an impressive price-performance ratio that makes it a compelling value? After weeks of debating, arguing, and cajoling, we came up with our list of winners, and we’re proud to unveil our Editors’ Best awards for 2008.

These products can help you create, manage, deploy, optimize, recover, and otherwise squeeze the most out of your SQL Server environment. They’re easily the best products that we’ve yet seen in the SQL Server ecosystem.

We also know that you, the readers of SQL Server Magazine, have your own opinions about which products are praiseworthy and which ones you wouldn’t recommend even to your back-stabbing rival in the next cubicle. That’s why we’ve created a special category in the SQL Server Magazine online forums (www.sqlmag.com) for our Editors’ Best awards, and we invite you to join in the discussion and share your opinions about the best (and worst) SQL Server products you’ve seen and used. Feel free to let us know if you disagree with our choices!

Product of the Year

Quad-Core Intel Xeon Processor 5400 Series
Intel • www.intel.com

Few products have the ability to turn an industry on its ear, but that’s exactly what Intel has done with the Quad-Core Xeon Processor 5400 Series. Massive database servers and the sprawling data-driven applications that depend on them can bring puny single- and dual-core processors to their wobbly, silicon knees. AMD, Intel’s primary rival, put forth a competing solution that suffered from production delays and setbacks, leaving Intel as the clear market leader in this burgeoning high-end segment of the CPU market. The benchmark-crushing performance that Intel’s Quad-Core CPUs provide can result in huge cost savings for DBAs tasked with squeezing maximum performance out of enormous (and enormously complex) databases.

Shannon Poulin, director of the Server Platforms Marketing Group at Intel, says that his company worked closely with the SQL Server software community to ensure that Intel’s architecture worked with parallelized applications such as SQL Server 2005 and that reduced power consumption and increased performance will continue hand-in-hand. “We’ve delivered an increasing amount of performance in the same energy consumption envelope,” says Poulin.

SQL Server Magazine Technical Director Michael Otey agrees, pointing out that Intel’s Quad-Core processors allow certain applications to take advantage of that extra processing power. “Enterprise-level database servers such as Microsoft SQL Server 2005 and SQL Server 2008 can take full advantage of all CPUs that are present, as can virtualization software,” says Otey. “Because these types of applications are designed for multiprocessor support, they can initiate separate threads on the individual processors of multicore systems.”

The rapid growth of virtualization technology and the imminent arrival of SQL Server 2008 might be garnering lots of attention these days, but you can count on this: Most of those impressive new software applications will be powered by more than a few burly Intel Quad-Core processors.

—Jeff James

See associated figure

Breakthrough Product

Microsoft Visual Studio 2008
Microsoft
www.microsoft.com

Although lots of media attention has been focused on the release of Windows Server 2008 and SQL Server 2008, Microsoft Visual Studio (VS) 2008 had the distinction of hitting the market first. The latest version of Microsoft’s ubiquitous IDE offers dozens of improvements and features for programmers, including .NET Framework improvements, support for updated versions of C# and Visual Basic, and an updated version of Microsoft Foundation Classes (MFC 9.0).

For the SQL Server community, the most significant new feature in VS 2008 is its support for Language Integrated Query (LINQ), a Microsoft .NET Framework component that introduces data querying to .NET languages. It’s big news for database developers, and many think it could change the way SQL Server databases are developed.

According to Gert Drapers, group engineering manager on the VS 2008 team, feedback from SQL Server developers has been positive. “LINQ and the entity data model are popular,” says Drapers. “There’s now less distance between the application and data tiers, which helps in overall application development.”

“LINQ is quite possibly the biggest paradigm change for database developers since the advent of ODBC,” says Michael Otey. “LINQ eliminates the languagedatabase disconnect and enables objectoriented database access through SQL-like extensions to VB or C#. Considering that LINQ is still in its early stages, it might be a while before you have to start worrying about converting your applications to use LINQ, but there’s little doubt that LINQ and DLinq represent the future of database development.”

—Jeff James

See associated figure

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Comments
  • Jeff
    4 years ago
    Aug 20, 2008

    @ wallsvp:

    Thanks for the kind words. Are there certain aspects of the awards issue that you liked more than others? We're always looking for reader feedback on our awards programs, so let me know what you think.

    You can also email me directly at jjames [@] windowsitpro.com if you prefer.

    Thanks -

    - Jeff

  • Wally
    4 years ago
    Jul 31, 2008

    Very nice, informative review w/o any hype.

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