Timothy Ford

PASS Day Two: You Can't Get There From Here (A Geog-DUH-phy Lesson)

Published Friday, September 21, 2007 10:23 AM

Here it is day two and I am finally starting to get adjusted to the time difference.

Wimp.

Sure, I thought I had it bad.  Two entire time zones between my native Michigan and Denver.  I always lose touch with just how global PASS is. 

I was attending Peter Ward's fantastic spotlight session on Engineering for the DBA and leaned over to a fellow attendee that I've become friends with through years of volunteerism (see a trend here) and had him note the time on Peter's laptop that he was using for the presentation: 

9:30 am.

This was 5:30 pm.  This was also my stop complaining moment.

There is some bloke named Tony from the U.K.  Says he's an editor of some sort for something called Simple Talk.  The U.K., for those who are not geographically savy, is a small land-locked country that borders with Nepal. It's leading export is boiled meat; and it is the only country with a period in it's name.  At least that's what it said on Wikipedia.  That must be about 7 hours different from the mountains of Colorado!

Then you have Gail Shaw, second-year attendee from South Africa whom I met last year when she answered a question from the audience on the SIG Quizbowl.  She was back this year and was up on stage with me this year as a contestant.  I am not sure how far in the future she normally lives, my brain is full so I am abstaining from math for the remainder of the week, but I am going to approximate that she is 42 hours ahead of Denver.  My estimate may be a little high or low, but I don't care any longer.

There are so many others:  Johan and Christoph from Germany (another country bordering Nepal according to Wiki), Greg from Australia, Louis from North Carolina (I believe that is Puerto Rico), Dan from the exotic island of Seattle. 

These are some of the people you're in sessions with from 0800 - 1800.  These are the friends you make from years of participation.  These are the fellow SQL professionals, Microsoft MVPs, and Speakers that you are out "brainstorming" with until 0200 after those long days in classes and meetings.

You learn a great deal about SQL Server and the platforms it runs on from these long days in class.  Just as valuable are those late nights/early mornings out at the vendor parties and pub crawls.  That's when you learn the politics of people in our industry, you collaborate on problems you're having back at work and perhaps find a new perspective on getting your job done.  You may even learn just how much Jagermeister a DBA can consume before he'll get on stage at a Karoke bar.  Most-importantly, you realize you're not alone in your experiences. 

Sure, after clocking subsequent 17 hour days I am tired.  But it is a good tired. 

Comments

No Comments
You need to sign in to comment on this blog

About Tim Ford

Tim Ford is a senior database administrator with Spectrum Health in Grand Rapids/Kalamazoo, Michigan. He is also an active volunteer with The Professional Association for SQL Server (PASS) since 2002 and has been a certified solutions developer (MCSD) since 2001. Tim is currently authoring a book with Louis Davidson for Red Gate Press on Dynamic Management Objects. He blogs at http://www.ford-it.com/sqlagentman and can also be seen acting generally daft at http://www.twitter.com/sqlagentman.


















<September 2007>
SuMoTuWeThFrSa
2627282930311
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30123456
Niklaus Wirth: Geek of the Week
 It is difficult to begin to estimate the huge extent of the contribution that Niklaus Wirth has made to... Read more...

Building an Exchange Server 2007 environment
 Of course, changing a 32,000 mailbox system, based in 40 Exchange Servers, to a centralised 25,000... Read more...

Manage Stress Before it Kills You
 The key to a long career in IT is in learning how to cope adaptively with stress. Matt Simmons, like... Read more...

Expecting the Worst
 Optimists are often disappointed Read more...

To Boldly Ask IT for Development Work
 Phil has always been mystified by the way that, in Science-Fiction films, the crew of space-ships are... Read more...