Blogs

Caching and Grocery Shopping

Caching and Grocery Shopping

By Kendra Little on May 25, 2011 • 1 min read

I recently talked with @TheJudgeOfCheese (t) about design patterns and grocery shopping.

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Tycho Brahe and Moving to Portland

Tycho Brahe and Moving to Portland

on May 23, 2011 • 2 min read

This much we agreed on: Tycho Brahe was a visionary, an astronomer, and he lost a big piece of his nose.

The rest was murky. I thought he died from syphilis, and that possibly his nose had been lost the same way.

Jeremiah said he lost his nose in a duel, and that he died of some sort of toxicity related to refusing to pee.

We were in the car, going somewhere. I think we were going to Portland and it was move-related. This is, you see, because we’re moving to Portland.

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SQL PASS Submissions 2011

SQL PASS Submissions 2011

on May 4, 2011 • 3 min read

It’s time to submit abstracts for the SQL PASS 2011 Summit. Here’s what I’d like to get up to.

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Down the Rabbit Hole

Down the Rabbit Hole

By Kendra Little on May 2, 2011 • 2 min read

Category: career
Tags: writing

You often don’t realize you’ve gone too far until it’s too late.

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What Do You Call a Group of Experts?

What Do You Call a Group of Experts?

By Kendra Little on April 25, 2011 • 3 min read

What’s an expert?

A variety of definitions of “expert” get tossed around – a specialist, someone with comprehensive knowledge, the person who knows more about a topic than anyone else within six feet. Many people go the way of the Supreme Court and say they know an expert when they see it.

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Do you work with data? You have options.

Do you work with data? You have options.

on April 15, 2011 • 5 min read

In preparing for the SQLPeople event, I thought about the role, motivation, and techniques of a “knowledge worker” in today’s society.

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SQLPeople events

SQLPeople events

By Kendra Little on April 13, 2011 • 2 min read

Not too long ago, Andy Leonard (blog|twitter) dreamed up the idea to create the SQLPeople community. The community is forming around the stories and ideas of its members. The SQLPeople website shares stories.

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