Showing posts with label accepted. Show all posts
Showing posts with label accepted. Show all posts

Thursday, 8 March 2012

Congrats on SQL Server 2005 RTM

After being in the SQL Server 2000 Service Pack 2 and Service Pack 3
betas I was very excited to be accepted into the Yukon beta. I received my
official beta1 goodies sometime around October 2003. After installing Yukon
for the first time I was shocked and amazed. My traditional enterprise
manager was gone, but it was replaced by a new tool that combined the best
parts of the enterprise manager, query analyzer, and dts into one uber tool.
I've been hooked ever since. I kept track of the all of the beta and ctp
drops and played with them in test environments.
In early January 2005, I was tasked with a new programming project at
work. This is the biggest project I've ever done. I knew I wanted to use
the new SQL Server and VS. Luckily, by the time my research and design on
this project was complete (May/June 05), beta2 was released and I started
digging in. I soon found that most of my hassles and gripes with SQL Server
2000 were resolved. Specifically, stored procedures, the development
environment is much better, I can walk through them line-by-line from VS, and
T-SQL enhancements are great (like the TRY-CATCH blocks!!). The new sql
server is just what we needed, with any luck the project will be early 2006!
Anyway, now that SQL Server 2005 has hit RTM and will ship November 7,
I would just like to congratulate the entire SQL Server 2005 team on a job
well done!
DId you pay the money yet,
or are you's using a pirate copy?
"Jonathan Miller" <JonathanMiller@.discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in
message news:06B13AFC-DE4B-40D6-BF07-7308C5CF0E2B@.microsoft.com...
> After being in the SQL Server 2000 Service Pack 2 and Service Pack 3
> betas I was very excited to be accepted into the Yukon beta. I received
> my
> official beta1 goodies sometime around October 2003. After installing
> Yukon
> for the first time I was shocked and amazed. My traditional enterprise
> manager was gone, but it was replaced by a new tool that combined the best
> parts of the enterprise manager, query analyzer, and dts into one uber
> tool.
> I've been hooked ever since. I kept track of the all of the beta and ctp
> drops and played with them in test environments.
> In early January 2005, I was tasked with a new programming project at
> work. This is the biggest project I've ever done. I knew I wanted to use
> the new SQL Server and VS. Luckily, by the time my research and design on
> this project was complete (May/June 05), beta2 was released and I started
> digging in. I soon found that most of my hassles and gripes with SQL
> Server
> 2000 were resolved. Specifically, stored procedures, the development
> environment is much better, I can walk through them line-by-line from VS,
> and
> T-SQL enhancements are great (like the TRY-CATCH blocks!!). The new sql
> server is just what we needed, with any luck the project will be early
> 2006!
> Anyway, now that SQL Server 2005 has hit RTM and will ship November 7,
> I would just like to congratulate the entire SQL Server 2005 team on a job
> well done!
>
|||Well I was in the official beta test and that is how I received all of the
beta and ctp drops. I downloaded the final release of both VS2005 and
SQL2005 through my MSDN Universal subscription. The final bits were posted
for MSDN Universal last Thursday. http://msdn.microsoft.com
"Bud Y. Zer" wrote:

> DId you pay the money yet,
> or are you's using a pirate copy?
>
> "Jonathan Miller" <JonathanMiller@.discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in
> message news:06B13AFC-DE4B-40D6-BF07-7308C5CF0E2B@.microsoft.com...
>
>

Congrats on SQL Server 2005 RTM

After being in the SQL Server 2000 Service Pack 2 and Service Pack 3
betas I was very excited to be accepted into the Yukon beta. I received my
official beta1 goodies sometime around October 2003. After installing Yukon
for the first time I was shocked and amazed. My traditional enterprise
manager was gone, but it was replaced by a new tool that combined the best
parts of the enterprise manager, query analyzer, and dts into one uber tool.
I've been hooked ever since. I kept track of the all of the beta and ctp
drops and played with them in test environments.
In early January 2005, I was tasked with a new programming project at
work. This is the biggest project I've ever done. I knew I wanted to use
the new SQL Server and VS. Luckily, by the time my research and design on
this project was complete (May/June 05), beta2 was released and I started
digging in. I soon found that most of my hassles and gripes with SQL Server
2000 were resolved. Specifically, stored procedures, the development
environment is much better, I can walk through them line-by-line from VS, and
T-SQL enhancements are great (like the TRY-CATCH blocks!!). The new sql
server is just what we needed, with any luck the project will be early 2006!
Anyway, now that SQL Server 2005 has hit RTM and will ship November 7,
I would just like to congratulate the entire SQL Server 2005 team on a job
well done!DId you pay the money yet,
or are you's using a pirate copy?
"Jonathan Miller" <JonathanMiller@.discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in
message news:06B13AFC-DE4B-40D6-BF07-7308C5CF0E2B@.microsoft.com...
> After being in the SQL Server 2000 Service Pack 2 and Service Pack 3
> betas I was very excited to be accepted into the Yukon beta. I received
> my
> official beta1 goodies sometime around October 2003. After installing
> Yukon
> for the first time I was shocked and amazed. My traditional enterprise
> manager was gone, but it was replaced by a new tool that combined the best
> parts of the enterprise manager, query analyzer, and dts into one uber
> tool.
> I've been hooked ever since. I kept track of the all of the beta and ctp
> drops and played with them in test environments.
> In early January 2005, I was tasked with a new programming project at
> work. This is the biggest project I've ever done. I knew I wanted to use
> the new SQL Server and VS. Luckily, by the time my research and design on
> this project was complete (May/June 05), beta2 was released and I started
> digging in. I soon found that most of my hassles and gripes with SQL
> Server
> 2000 were resolved. Specifically, stored procedures, the development
> environment is much better, I can walk through them line-by-line from VS,
> and
> T-SQL enhancements are great (like the TRY-CATCH blocks!!). The new sql
> server is just what we needed, with any luck the project will be early
> 2006!
> Anyway, now that SQL Server 2005 has hit RTM and will ship November 7,
> I would just like to congratulate the entire SQL Server 2005 team on a job
> well done!
>|||Well I was in the official beta test and that is how I received all of the
beta and ctp drops. I downloaded the final release of both VS2005 and
SQL2005 through my MSDN Universal subscription. The final bits were posted
for MSDN Universal last Thursday. http://msdn.microsoft.com
"Bud Y. Zer" wrote:
> DId you pay the money yet,
> or are you's using a pirate copy?
>
> "Jonathan Miller" <JonathanMiller@.discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in
> message news:06B13AFC-DE4B-40D6-BF07-7308C5CF0E2B@.microsoft.com...
> >
> > After being in the SQL Server 2000 Service Pack 2 and Service Pack 3
> > betas I was very excited to be accepted into the Yukon beta. I received
> > my
> > official beta1 goodies sometime around October 2003. After installing
> > Yukon
> > for the first time I was shocked and amazed. My traditional enterprise
> > manager was gone, but it was replaced by a new tool that combined the best
> > parts of the enterprise manager, query analyzer, and dts into one uber
> > tool.
> > I've been hooked ever since. I kept track of the all of the beta and ctp
> > drops and played with them in test environments.
> > In early January 2005, I was tasked with a new programming project at
> > work. This is the biggest project I've ever done. I knew I wanted to use
> > the new SQL Server and VS. Luckily, by the time my research and design on
> > this project was complete (May/June 05), beta2 was released and I started
> > digging in. I soon found that most of my hassles and gripes with SQL
> > Server
> > 2000 were resolved. Specifically, stored procedures, the development
> > environment is much better, I can walk through them line-by-line from VS,
> > and
> > T-SQL enhancements are great (like the TRY-CATCH blocks!!). The new sql
> > server is just what we needed, with any luck the project will be early
> > 2006!
> > Anyway, now that SQL Server 2005 has hit RTM and will ship November 7,
> > I would just like to congratulate the entire SQL Server 2005 team on a job
> > well done!
> >
>
>

Congrats on SQL Server 2005 RTM

After being in the SQL Server 2000 Service Pack 2 and Service Pack 3
betas I was very excited to be accepted into the Yukon beta. I received my
official beta1 goodies sometime around October 2003. After installing Yukon
for the first time I was shocked and amazed. My traditional enterprise
manager was gone, but it was replaced by a new tool that combined the best
parts of the enterprise manager, query analyzer, and dts into one uber tool.
I've been hooked ever since. I kept track of the all of the beta and ctp
drops and played with them in test environments.
In early January 2005, I was tasked with a new programming project at
work. This is the biggest project I've ever done. I knew I wanted to use
the new SQL Server and VS. Luckily, by the time my research and design on
this project was complete (May/June 05), beta2 was released and I started
digging in. I soon found that most of my hassles and gripes with SQL Server
2000 were resolved. Specifically, stored procedures, the development
environment is much better, I can walk through them line-by-line from VS, an
d
T-SQL enhancements are great (like the TRY-CATCH blocks!!). The new sql
server is just what we needed, with any luck the project will be early 2006!
Anyway, now that SQL Server 2005 has hit RTM and will ship November 7,
I would just like to congratulate the entire SQL Server 2005 team on a job
well done!DId you pay the money yet,
or are you's using a pirate copy?
"Jonathan Miller" <JonathanMiller@.discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in
message news:06B13AFC-DE4B-40D6-BF07-7308C5CF0E2B@.microsoft.com...
> After being in the SQL Server 2000 Service Pack 2 and Service Pack 3
> betas I was very excited to be accepted into the Yukon beta. I received
> my
> official beta1 goodies sometime around October 2003. After installing
> Yukon
> for the first time I was shocked and amazed. My traditional enterprise
> manager was gone, but it was replaced by a new tool that combined the best
> parts of the enterprise manager, query analyzer, and dts into one uber
> tool.
> I've been hooked ever since. I kept track of the all of the beta and ctp
> drops and played with them in test environments.
> In early January 2005, I was tasked with a new programming project at
> work. This is the biggest project I've ever done. I knew I wanted to use
> the new SQL Server and VS. Luckily, by the time my research and design on
> this project was complete (May/June 05), beta2 was released and I started
> digging in. I soon found that most of my hassles and gripes with SQL
> Server
> 2000 were resolved. Specifically, stored procedures, the development
> environment is much better, I can walk through them line-by-line from VS,
> and
> T-SQL enhancements are great (like the TRY-CATCH blocks!!). The new sql
> server is just what we needed, with any luck the project will be early
> 2006!
> Anyway, now that SQL Server 2005 has hit RTM and will ship November 7,
> I would just like to congratulate the entire SQL Server 2005 team on a job
> well done!
>|||Well I was in the official beta test and that is how I received all of the
beta and ctp drops. I downloaded the final release of both VS2005 and
SQL2005 through my MSDN Universal subscription. The final bits were posted
for MSDN Universal last Thursday. http://msdn.microsoft.com
"Bud Y. Zer" wrote:

> DId you pay the money yet,
> or are you's using a pirate copy?
>
> "Jonathan Miller" <JonathanMiller@.discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in
> message news:06B13AFC-DE4B-40D6-BF07-7308C5CF0E2B@.microsoft.com...
>
>