 | 20 Nov 2008 Listen to this on-demand webcast to learn how the integrated development environment in IBM® Data Studio will help you build the skills to write faster queries, understand the performance characteritics of data access, manage your schema changes, and more.
About this webcast
As businesses face economic challenges, the pressure on IT staff to deliver faster and higher quality code with fewer people becomes more intense with each quarter. Teams turn to development methodologies such as "agile" to help keep them aligned with business objectives and customer requirements, requiring them to be more collaborative and more accountable for the work they produce.
Unfortunately, in many enterprises, the gulf between developers accessing data and the DBAs responsible for delivering on service level agreements or compliance initiatives remains wide. Too often, data access code is deployed into test and production with inadequate consideration given to overall system performance or compliance requirements.
In this webcast, learn how developers can not only become more productive, but can improve their skills and increase their value to their employers by leveraging the integrated development environment in IBM Data Studio to write faster queries, understand the performance characteritics of data access even from the development environment, manage their own schema changes in development, ensure that proper privacy practice are followed for testing, and more.
Speaker:
- Rafael Coss, Lead enabling architect and evangelist - Data Studio pureQuery
Rafael Coss is lead enabling architect and evangelist for Data Studio.
He spends much of his time with customers, helping them get the most out of
Data Studio and pureQuery. From an initial demo and discussion, to design and
technical consulting, Rafael helps customers and partners understand and get the
most out of IBM's Data Management technologies. He is frequently in the vanguard
of new technology and has previously driven successful adoptions and deployments
of DB2® pureXML™ and DB2 spatial technology.
|  | |  |