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October 24, 2007
Busting Myths ...
It reminded me very much of a fall trip I took recently in Colorado and the picture I have included here is of the Eastern approach to Independence Pass, the gateway to Aspen. The picture here is among my favorites, and from time to time I see it come up on my PC as my screen-saver pulls up pictures from a folder.
When I am in the major cities, I really do like to walk through galleries and admire the art. Whenever I am in London I stroll down Mayfair and when in Chicago, I head for Rush Street. The galleries I spend time in arenât your usual high-profile tourist spots â and those familiar with London must be wondering what I am talking about.
But for me, the car dealers showrooms on Mayfair where once a McLaren F1 was a near-permanent exhibit, and where I can glimpse the latest Porscheâs, BMWâs, Aston Martins and other beauties, would never fail to get me to walk on down that street. In Chicago, thereâs Gold Coast Bentley, recently upgraded to two levels and where the Lamborghini marque has been added to the regular stable of Bentleyâs, Ferraris, Aston Martinâs and Salweenâs, and once they even had a wonderful 8.0 Liter quad-turbocharged W16 1001 bhp Bugatti Veyron on display!
Chicago with beautiful fall vegetation, and great cars to admire and salivate over was at its very best.
The picture of the fall in Colorado does feature a 50th Annivsersary Corvette C5 Z06 â a great car. When compared to the cars of my colleagues, it barely gets a mention as talk turns to Mercedes Benz's, Porscheâs and Jaguars. And in Europe I get some pretty strange looks when I try to compare it with the better known super-cars. You see, thereâs a terrible myth surrounding the car â itâs just an American muscle car that true performance fans wouldnât really consider worthy of consideration alongside the current crop of high-performance exotics.
They are too heavy! They may be alright in a straight line, but they handle poorly! And they have no heritage, nothing that would find support among the well-heeled aristocracy! But is this really true â how do myths like this originate and how do they get propagated?.
When you look at a car like the Corvette, it has been manufactured for more than 50 years so itâs not all that new on the scene. Under the management of David Hill, Chevrolet worked very hard on both, the power delivery aspects as well as weight. It comes as a surprise to many that the car pictured weighed less than a Porsche 911 Turbo of the same year, and where horsepower and torque numbers were pretty identical.
But more importantly, in the difficult climate of one of the toughest endurance races on the calendar, the 24 hours of Le Mans, Corvette has taken its class 4 of the last 6 years â loosing once in2004 to a one-off special Ferrari; and then again, this year, to an extremely well-financed Aston Martin team. To put other cars behind it for all of these years, was a remarkable feat!
When I posted my blog âBugs are Everywhereâ and talked about the performance of SQL/MX, I received a comment that said âstrapping an âItaniumâ rocket to an SQL/MX pig does NOT make it any sleekerâ! And in a private email that wasnât posted, one writer referred to SQL/MX with even less respect and called it âbloatwareâ! The sentiment was that it was just bad code.
But is it really? And what is good code? I had the opportunity recently to have an email exchange with Dave Finnie on this very topic. Dave is a gifted programmer at my previous company Insession and has contributed to a number of successful product developments â anyone running the ICE HPR-IP solutions is running a lot of Daveâs code. Dave believes good results can be obtained when code is readable, so that someone can fix it. When itâs understandable by any other coder, for the same reason. And when it works and performs as per spec â a bit of thought at the beginning of the project can make a huge difference! In other words, nothing really surprising here â pretty much what we would expect.
The perception of weight, or a heavy footprint, is always a concern. The decoupled nature of the GoldenGate TDM product has a source and a target component and we have always pursued a lightweight implementation for the source. In talking with my colleague Sami, to have any chance of keeping up in real time, you canât add to the overhead of the source â the data has to get off the platform just as fast as you can shove it onto a link.
But nevertheless, in talking with Wendy Bartlett recently, she acknowledged that SQL/MX did have performance and stability problems in its first few releases. âWe think that this has been mostly resolved in newer versions and that the problems at this point are more characteristic of what would be expected from making functional additions to the product.â Wendy added that another phenomenon that they saw was longstanding defects sometimes being exposed, for the first time, when the code meets a new application.
There is also the issue of how SQL/MX is accessed â is ODBC or JDBC involved? Are the applications, or indeed other infrastructure programs, accessing via these standard interfaces? There may be a potential for some performance related issues coming from these interfaces â and I for one, would really like to hear more from the community on this point.
But again, is the myth surrounding SQL/MX much the same as the myth around the Corvette? Has early examples of the product really tainted the expectations that much? I am not good enough these days to pull any code apart and check it all out â although I am sure others have.
When I bought the Corvette pictured above I emailed Chris Rooke and asked him what he thought. Chris is a very active and enthusiastic Porsche Turbo owner who actively races it on racetracks around the Western US. âThereâs one that I race against and on some tracks I win, and on others he does. In terms of price performance, itâs a hard car to beatâ was his response.
In the last days Hal Massey was on the Cupertino campus, and before he took up his new engineering position in Ft Collins, I just happened to notice a white Corvette in the parking lot. Yes, Hal is a very serious race-car driver and sure enough, he owns a Corvette.
Seeing both Chris and Hal, both of whom I seriously respected when it came to cars, providing such strong support for the car, made me feel a lot better. So then, why arenât we all more aggressively pursuing the input of others who are now running SQL/MX in production? Why arenât we spending more time engaged in sharing what we are doing â when I checked the ITUG SQL SIG Forum the last posting was dated mid 2006. Shouldnât we be communicating more?
HP went to great lengths to get the âMythbustersâ from the Discovery Channel to blow-up one NonStop server complex to see how transparently and quickly the back-up data center took over â do we need to get them to bust the SQL/MX performance myth?
It was a lot of fun to watch the video and see the servers blown apart - but do we really need to see acts this dramatic to impress us? Are we waiting for something similar before we put an end to this myth?
Posted by RT Writer at October 24, 2007 8:17 PM
