What are your DBA subclasses?
From: Michael Moore <michaeljmoore_at_gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 15 Feb 2011 11:11:49 -0800
Message-ID: <AANLkTikrymS5u5b_-pvJsMXGmXwHXoR9jqJqqy=S=hdf_at_mail.gmail.com>
When we were a much smaller company, we had one class of DB, "generic-DBA" where DBA was an abbreviation for "Does 'Bout Anything". A given DBA was responsible for Installation, patching, configuration, disk management, PL/SQL code review, tuning SQL , application migration, development standards etc etc.
Date: Tue, 15 Feb 2011 11:11:49 -0800
Message-ID: <AANLkTikrymS5u5b_-pvJsMXGmXwHXoR9jqJqqy=S=hdf_at_mail.gmail.com>
When we were a much smaller company, we had one class of DB, "generic-DBA" where DBA was an abbreviation for "Does 'Bout Anything". A given DBA was responsible for Installation, patching, configuration, disk management, PL/SQL code review, tuning SQL , application migration, development standards etc etc.
Now that we've grown into a billion dollar company with over a hundred developers, we probably need to have more specialization. I'm thinking in terms of DA, DCA, DBA ... you get the idea.
I'd be interested in how other medium sized organizations divide up their various DBA functions.
I'm sure this has been disguised before, so if you wan't to link me to reading material, that would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Mike
-- http://www.freelists.org/webpage/oracle-lReceived on Tue Feb 15 2011 - 13:11:49 CST