North Carolina Progress User Group Meeting - Oct. 15, 2008 - Progress Database
This is a discussion on North Carolina Progress User Group Meeting - Oct. 15, 2008 - Progress Database ; Hear how easy it is to switch to OE Architect, and learn to implement utilities for the "recovery" part of your disaster recovery plan at the North Carolina Progress user group (NCPUG) meeting, Wednesday, October 15, 2008. Enjoy networking with ...
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| utilities for the "recovery" part of your disaster recovery plan at the North Carolina Progress user group (NCPUG) meeting, Wednesday, October 15, 2008. Enjoy networking with fellow Progress users and partners over a free, delicious lunch! Meeting Details: Wednesday, October 15, 2008 Noon - 1 - Networking lunch (it's free!) 1:30 to 5 p.m. - ""An IDE Whose Time Has Come" and "How Healthy Is Your Database" Presentations Location: Keystone Systems’ Office Directions: You can also visit MapQuest or GoogleMaps. Charge: Meeting is free for guests and members. RSVP: Contact Laura Woodard at (804) 553-1130 or lwoodard@allegroconsultants.com at least five days in advance. Let her know as well if you'll be attending the lunch. Presentations: "An IDE Whose Time Has Come" Presenter: Mike Lonski, Allegro OpenEdge 10 has been out for a few years now. As always, new versions bring change and one of the biggest for the Progress developer is the move away from the Progress proprietary integrated development environment (IDE) to one that is an industry standard. Changing your OE Studio licenses with its familiar AppBuilder over to OE Architect licenses with an IDE based on the Eclipse platform can seem daunting but it shouldn’t. Come get a quick tour of the Architect environment and see how easy it is to move to this new and vastly improved IDE. "How Healthy is Your Database?" Presented: TBA Vital statistics on production databases are rarely monitored frequently enough to take preventative action on halting the impending crisis. This session walks you through the utilities available to monitor physical database limits, runtime memory and block checking, record validation, crucial database events that have occurred and the importance of checking the “recovery’ part of your disaster recovery plan. You’ll learn how to make these checks work proactively for you. |
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