C.J. Date seminar - October 19-20, 2005

  • From: "Karen Morton" <Karen.Morton@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: oracle-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Tue, 27 Sep 2005 12:11:45 -0500

** This notice is being posted with the list moderator's permission. **


Hotsos Enterprises, Ltd. is pleased to sponsor a two day seminar by C.J. Date 
in Grapevine, Texas on October 19-20, 2005 at the SpringHill Suites Hotel.  C. 
J. Date is an independent author, lecturer, researcher, and consultant, 
specializing in relational database technology. He is best known for his book 
An Introduction to Database Systems (eighth edition, Addison-Wesley, 2004), 
which has sold some 725,000 copies and is used by several hundred colleges and 
universities worldwide. He is also the author of many other books on database 
management, including most recently:
From Morgan Kaufmann: Temporal Data and the Relational Model (coauthored with 
Hugh Darwen and Nikos A. Lorentzos, 2003) 
From O'Reilly: Database in Depth: Relational Theory for Practitioners (2005) 
From Addison-Wesley: Databases, Types, and the Relational Model: The Third 
Manifesto (coauthored with Hugh Darwen, to appear) 
Another book, Go Faster! The TransRelational Approach to DBMS Implementation, 
is also due for publication in the near future.

Mr. Date enjoys a reputation that is second to none for his ability to 
communicate complex technical subjects in a clear and understandable fashion.

The seminar is a combination of two presentations:  Database in Depth: 
Relational Theory for Practitioners and Go Faster! The TransRelational Approach 
to DBMS Implementation.

Course Description

Day 1 - Database in Depth: Relational Theory for Practitioners

Years of experience in working with the database community strongly suggest a 
need for a seminar that covers relational principles in a way not tainted by 
the quirks and peculiarities of existing products, commercial practice, or the 
current version of the SQL standard. This seminar has been designed to meet 
that need. It's aimed primarily at database practitioners (that is, people 
working in the database field, perhaps on a daily basis) who feel they don't 
have as much understanding of the theory underlying their own field as they 
might. That theory is, of course, the relational model--and while the 
fundamental ideas of that model are all quite simple, they're widely 
misrepresented in the trade press and elsewhere; indeed, they're widely 
misunderstood, and often not understood at all. 


Day 2 - Go Faster! The TransRelational Approach to DBMS Implementation

In the field of scientific endeavor, an idea emerges from time to time that is 
so startlingly novel, and so dramatically better than anything that went 
before, that it can truly be described as a breakthrough. The relational model 
provides the obvious example in the database world; almost everything done in 
that world since the relational model came along stands as testament to the 
radical nature and impact of that one brilliant idea. And now we are witnessing 
the birth of what looks set to be another major breakthrough: The 
TransRelational Model. In this speaker's opinion, the TransRelational model is 
likely to prove the most significant advance in this field since Codd gave us 
the relational model, over 35 years ago.

So what is the TransRelational model? In essence, it is an implementation 
technology; it represents among other things a radically new and elegant 
approach to the question of implementing the relational model. When the 
relational model first appeared, skeptics accused it of being impossible to 
implement efficiently. Over the next few decades, therefore, vast sums of money 
were spent on attempts to prove the skeptics wrong. And those efforts did not 
prove in vain; today's products do perform fairly well, if not always 
spectacularly. But at what cost? The products have become quite notoriously 
unwieldy and difficult to manage, with their huge array of storage structures, 
access methods, optimization techniques, tuning knobs, analysis utilities, 
performance hints, installation options, and so on, and the job of the database 
administrator has become virtually impossible.

The TransRelational model has the potential to change all that. It provides a 
totally new approach to implementation, one that is dramatically different from 
those that have been tried in the past and found wanting (including all of the 
approaches encountered in today's SQL products). Such an implementation would 
be orders of magnitude faster than, and would deliver a far greater degree of 
data independence than, today's SQL products. It would also greatly simplify 
the job of the DBA.


Each participant receives a copy of the course notes as well as Mr. Date's 
"Database in Depth" book.  For more information on the seminar and registration 
information, please see http://www.hotsos.com/portal/education/DD201 or contact 
Stacy Wright at 817-488-6200 x505.
--
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