omlet v4 wrote:
> "Howard J. Rogers" <hjr_at_dizwell.com> wrote in message news:<40c43160$0$31674$afc38c87_at_news.optusnet.com.au>...
>
>>"omlet v4" <amjadd_at_uop.edu.jo> wrote in message
>>news:604b7892.0406070052.24e7134b_at_posting.google.com...
>>
>>
>>>Check his e-book: no refs at all!
>>
>>Out of interest, what references would you have me make?
>>
>>Regards
>>HJR
>
>
> At least ref Anjun Kulk, Steve Adams, Jonathan Klein, Steve Klein, Jim
> Gray, Dave Lomet....etc. I offer my apologies as their their names are
> their trademarks.
>
> Do you know what's the irony! I always thought your book is quite GOOD
> --
> really a wealth of information. At least, better than recent books
> bestsellers such as Gaja's book 101 on tuning and "tuning without hit
> ratios" crab. Did I forget to mention that formentioned MORON was my
> boss at some point?!
>
> Now back to OMLET. OMLET is a pretty snapshot of Oracle Health with 48
> built-in queries (prepared statements with a separate thread for each
> -- and control for the user to specify thread sleep). Everything else
> is customizable -- you plug your queries where ever you choose; there
> are listeners on every object on the main screen -- you simply right
> click to get a list of relevant stats (only relevant stats for that
> object). Results are Java J-tables that are contineously updated --
> have their own threads -- also fully customisable with 3D charting.
> Dynamic charts are accumulative or differential.
>
> Now you want response times, waits or system events -- they are all
> there on the flow arrows between objects -- fully customizable too. Do
> you want to implement the YAHJRTM "Yet Another HJR Tuning Method"? you
> can; probably in less than 30 minutes.
>
> Or you shell $15000 on expensive tools (i.e. Spotlight) that other
> proclaimed experts wrote and BANG your instance with it.
>
> The queries are left to "expert like yourself". In fact I am writing a
> new tool to convert the SNAIL-Query-language -- Apardon Me DOC -- to
> JAVA which should be ready in the next few months and would be
> embedded in OMLET 4.1 user defined query menu.
>
> Actually the queries, the options , the params are all provided by the
> DBMS engineers and DBA's of the largest IT arm of a major airline
> company (150 DBAs handling more than 350 mission critical instances).
> Why do think OMLET's address is in Arlington?!
Are you aware of how you sound, with posts like this?
Received on Tue Jun 08 2004 - 16:28:24 CDT