Charles Garry

Feel Free to Ignore the New SQL Server

It has been almost six years since Microsoft released a new version of SQL Server, and now after so much discussion it appears we finally have a new one. They should have called it SQL Server Barely 2005. In fact this reminds me of the automobile companies that start selling next years designated models this […]

Oracles Free Database Is Good for Business

In a recent column I suggested that Oracles acquisition of Innobase might be a sign that Oracle was gearing up to support MySQL. Of course several people took issue with that perspective. One reader even suggested I was on crack. Now comes the announcement that Oracle plans to release Oracle Database 10g Express Edition, a […]

MS Office 12 BI Makes for Risky Business

You are likely to be a member of your organizations stealth IT group whether or not you are aware of it. If you have a desktop or laptop PC and a way to extract data from other sources and populate a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet, then chances are you belong to this less than exclusive club. […]

Addressing Conflicts of Interest in Security Processes

Last week I participated in an IT executive roundtable in New York, where we asked the audience what subjects were currently top of mind. The initial talking points for the roundtable were both security and open-source software, but, clearly for this audience, security was the more dominant issue on their minds that day. Now, that […]

Oracle May Want to Spur MySQLs Growth, not Hurt It

I admittedly was caught off guard at Oracles recent acquisition of Innobase, makers of a transactional storage engine that works under the covers of MySQL, the popular open source database. Many have speculated about the dark and terrible plans Oracle has to destroy MySQL. Well, I have to say: give me a break! Oracle is […]

Envisioning a Grid Future

If you are like me, you have probably followed the entire discussion around grid computing with a detached sense of curiosity: a feeling that the idea sounds cool but in practicality seems more science fiction than science. When we add the fact that every vendor seems to want to bend the notion of grid computing […]

To Be Agile You Must Embrace Change

The agile infrastructure. Just the phrase conjures up images of gazelles running or contortionists bending themselves into pretzel shapes. Come to think of it, I actually watched a man fold himself up and get locked in a glass trunk at a conference last year. I wasnt thinking agile at the time. My thoughts were more […]

Who Will Win the Application War?

Im attending a conference this week, and I am watching a well-respected academic present his vision of the agile enterprise. He advocates clever new perspectives that organizations should utilize to better respond to change as it happens. He reasons that no company can predict the future, but what they can do is build a company […]

Business and IT Arent Mutually Exclusive—for Some Companies, Anyway

I wish every CIO and CEO of a major corporation had the opportunity to attend the Teradata Partners conference. This year marks the sixth Partners I have attended, and the thing that always impresses me is the fact that for about three days, its like you stepped through the looking glass. I say that affectionately, […]

Software Buyers Have Resources at Hand

I have kids playing fall baseball and softball. I volunteered to keep score, mostly because I read Moneyball over the summer and I became fascinated with all the statistics that baseball keeps. Wouldnt it be great if we had some sort of statistical history to tell us which software is better than the other? Of […]