Data Driver

Blog archive

Gates Plugs SQL Server at Tech-Ed

While Microsoft chairman Bill Gates yesterday talked up everything from Silverlight to robotics in his TechEd keynote yesterday, he also gave a plug for database development and the forthcoming SQL Server 2008 release.

"It's a very big release in terms of what people can do in the data center, how these various pieces connect together, different types of data that we can understand in a very rich way. And so this is central, and it's a big investment for us, something that is very key," Gates said.

Interestingly, he talked up how SQL Server is becoming the engine for other data-driven Microsoft platforms including Active Directory and even SharePoint. "Microsoft has always had a central focus on SQL Server as the place to store data," said Gates. "It's where we have the greatest capacity, the ability to distribute, update, query in very rich ways. In fact, what you see us doing is taking all our different data driven activities, and pushing them into SQL."

For example, now meta directory stored in Active Directory is SQL-based, where objects are replicated. Gates said in the future, Exchange will use the SQL store as well. While SharePoint already uses SQL, "we'll expose more and more of that native SQL power to the SharePoint developer for them to do easy application development," Gates said.

Gates was joined on stage by Dave Campbell, who talked up SQL Server 2008's spatial data as well as its support for file types.

Meanwhile, Gates also threw a bone to shops that use Visual Studio Team System that are managing apps developed for IBM's DB2 database. With the new support, developers will be able to perform DB2 development within Visual Studio.

Posted by Jeffrey Schwartz on 06/04/2008


comments powered by Disqus

Featured

  • Copilot Agent Mode Preview Highlights New Visual Studio 17.14 Release

    Agent mode, now in public preview for Visual Studio 17.14, marks a major step forward for AI-assisted development. Unlike previous Copilot features, agent mode can autonomously plan, edit, iterate, and invoke trusted tools-completing complex coding tasks from a single natural language prompt.

  • Microsoft Busts the 'Myth of AI/ML and Java'

    Microsoft, contradicting beliefs of Java developers responding to a survey, said they don't need to learn AI, master machine learning, or switch to Python to build intelligent, production-ready applications.

  • Predicting the Future Using Azure Machine Learning

    Eric D. Boyd of responsiveX previews his VSLive! 2025 session at Microsoft HQ in August where he explains how Azure ML empowers teams to build, deploy, and manage machine learning models with ease and confidence.

  • VS Code 1.10 Showcases New, Detailed Markdown Copilot Prompting

    The new way to get the most out of GitHub Copilot is from markdown prompting, or writing detailed, reusable natural-language instructions in files like README.md or copilot-instructions.md to guide different AI models in generating context-aware, accurate code.

  • Uno Platform Studio and 'Hot Design' Reach General Availability

    Uno Platform, a .NET-centric open source project for building single-codebase apps across multiple platforms, this week announced v6.0 of its flagship offering, which introduces a zero-install, web-based IDE for rapid cross-platform development, alongside a modernized app architecture that embraces MVU and .NET-style extensions.

Subscribe on YouTube