-
as seen on Oracle Blogs
- Search for 'Oracle Blogs'
I got a question today from someone asking about the older SAS1 hardware from over a year ago that we had on the older 7x10 series. They didn't leave an email so I couldn't respond directly, but I said this blog would be blunt, frank, and open so I have no problem addressing it publicly.
A quick…
>>> More
-
as seen on Ask Ubuntu
- Search for 'Ask Ubuntu'
I have a very frustrating problem with my PC. I cannot install any recent version of Ubuntu Server (or even Desktop) since 9.04 even using the text-based installer. I boot from a USB stick created by Unetbootin (I also tried other methods such as startup disk creator with no difference).
On the Server…
>>> More
-
as seen on Stack Overflow
- Search for 'Stack Overflow'
My Linux machine reports "uname -a" outputs as below:-
[root@tom i386]# uname -a
Linux tom 2.6.9-89.ELsmp #1 SMP Mon Apr 20 10:34:33 EDT 2009 i686 i686 i386 GNU/Linux
[root@tom i386]#
As per man page of uname, the entries "i686 i686 i386" denotes:-
machine hardware name (i686)
processor type (i686)
hardware…
>>> More
-
as seen on Super User
- Search for 'Super User'
Hi,
I have a USB wifi card (D-Link DWA-125) on a Windows 7 x64 computer. The problem is that the card appears on the "safely remove hardware" list, but I don't ever want to unplug it, so I would like to remove it from the list.
So far I have only found solutions that mess with the registry (and…
>>> More
-
as seen on Super User
- Search for 'Super User'
I have a new desktop computer with two SSDs: one running Linux Mint 15 (SSD1), the other running Windows 7 (SSD2). My mint runs perfectly - USB wireless adapter is recognized, SSD2 (connected by SATA) is recognized and accessible through the filesystem, Ethernet works, etc.
However, my Windows 7…
>>> More
-
as seen on SQL Blog
- Search for 'SQL Blog'
Part 1 of this series was an introduction and overview of Hyper-V Dynamic Memory. This part looks at SQL Server memory management and how the SQL engine responds to changing OS memory conditions.
Part 2: SQL Server Memory Management
As with any Windows process, sqlserver.exe has a virtual…
>>> More
-
as seen on SQL Blog
- Search for 'SQL Blog'
SQL and Dynamic Memory Blog Post Series
Hyper-V Dynamic Memory is a new feature in Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1 that allows the memory assigned to guest virtual machines to vary according to demand. Using this feature with SQL Server is supported, but how well does it work in…
>>> More
-
as seen on SQL Blog
- Search for 'SQL Blog'
SQL and Dynamic Memory Blog Post Series
Hyper-V Dynamic Memory is a new feature in Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1 that allows the memory assigned to guest virtual machines to vary according to demand. Using this feature with SQL Server is supported, but how well does it work in…
>>> More
-
as seen on Stack Overflow
- Search for 'Stack Overflow'
Dear everyone,
I have successfully debugged my own memory leak problems. However, I have noticed some very strange occurence.
for fid, fv in freqDic.iteritems():
outf.write(fid+"\t") #ID
for i, term in enumerate(domain): #Vector
tfidf = self.tf(term…
>>> More
-
as seen on SQL Blog
- Search for 'SQL Blog'
In parts 1 and 2 of this series we looked at the basics of Hyper-V Dynamic Memory and SQL Server memory management. In this part Serdar looks at configuration guidelines for SQL Server memory management.
Part 3: Configuration Guidelines for Hyper-V Dynamic Memory and SQL Server
Now that…
>>> More