Daily Coping 29 Dec 2021

I started to add a daily coping tip to the SQLServerCentral newsletter and to the Community Circle, which is helping me deal with the issues in the world. I’m adding my responses for each day here. All my coping tips are under this tag.

Today’s tip is to choose to give or receive the gift of forgiveness.

This is a tough one for me. I don’t always accept when someone forgives me, even my wife. I usually continue to beat myself up. I don’t always forgive easily when someone has wronged me, or I feel wronged.

I’m learning to be better, and reminding myself to let things go. I don’t have anything right now to  let go, but I’m reminding myself of times past, which is a place that has been helpful to to remind me to forgive.

I didn’t get along with my father in my younger years. From 15-45, I never saw him. Finally I begrudgingly started to rebuild a relationship at that point. I learned to let things go and forgive him. I even learned to let past feelings go. I didn’t forget, but I wasn’t angry anymore. My one son met him and my wife spent a few evenings with him before he passes. I regret my other two kids not meeting him until his funeral.

It was a long, hard journey, but I think that has helped me learn to forgive many others and accept actions or behaviors against me that I don’t like. I still don’t like them, but I let them wash over me better and don’t hold (as many) grudges. I forgive quicker.

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Daily Coping 28 Dec 2021

I started to add a daily coping tip to the SQLServerCentral newsletter and to the Community Circle, which is helping me deal with the issues in the world. I’m adding my responses for each day here. All my coping tips are under this tag.

Today’s tip is to congratulate someone for an achievement that may go unnoticed.

I had a friend get accepted to speak at a conference. That happens all the time, and plenty of people get accepted. Plenty get rejected as well, but since I knew, I just sent a congrats to them.

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Looking Back at 2021

Today is my last day of work for 2021. I’m off to a family vacation for the rest of the week to enjoy time together and celebrate the New Year. I wanted to take a look back at the year before I leave and give you a few thoughts on various data-related topics.

The big news for those Microsoft data platform people is that SQL Server 2022 is coming. No idea when, and without public CTPs, I think it might be a 2022 H2 release, but Microsoft committed to the naming. There have been a number of talks, at Ignite, the PASS Data Community Summit, and the SQL Server and Azure SQL Conference. I had the chance to talk with Bob Ward and Pedro Lopes, and they are excited and proud of the upcoming release.

I don’t think it’s a massive change, but there are a few nice things, and I look forward to the continued query processor improvements. It’s also nice to have a new version coming out after a few years. I’m guessing there are plenty of people working with 2016 or prior versions that might look to upgrade in the next couple of years.

The other area that occupies a bunch of my time is the event scene. I am have spent a lot of my time in the last decade going to events and helping promote them. SQL Saturday has been an incredible boon to bringing together data professionals at local events, and I look forward to that continuing. 2020 and 2021 were hard years, with relatively few events, either virtual or physical. Concerns over people getting together have kept many organizers and venues from running anything.

Many of us are vaccinated and there are areas trying to return to some sense of normalcy. I don’t know where the future will go, but I was lucky enough to go to a few events this year. Dataminds Connect in Belgium, SQL Saturday Orlando 2021, and the SQL Server and Azure SQL Conference were highlights for me. Different rules and restrictions at each, and compliance with those was easy for me. I loved getting to see people.

There were few virtual events, and many of the events that did take place saw big declines from the attendance and engagement in 2020. While some user groups and smaller events have thrived, many have not. I hope that we continue to see some virtual events in the future, but I am looking forward to more physical interactions in 2022.

One interesting data item from 2021 was the change in how healthcare has gone virtual. I’ve seen more visits taking place, and more devices coming that help smaller facilities run diagnostics for remote doctors. I’ve seen some home devices as well, and I love the growth in accessibility, and I worry about the security of data and privacy. The push to do reduce contact with others has led to some innovation for sure.

Many of us have worked with data for a long time, and we know that companies have usually embraced the collection and analysis of data related to their businesses. Knowing that, I’ve been surprised how often I find companies struggling with supply chain issues and not knowing the status of their orders. Perhaps they do and prefer not to let consumers know, but in the past I’ve often seen estimates of when something will arrive. Even Amazon has had a lot of “out of stock and no idea” posts on products. I find it interesting that companies either don’t have the data or won’t disclose it. Either way, a lack of transparency wasn’t the data change I expected in 2021.

I haven’t dabbled in Bitcoin or cryptocurrency at all, and I’m not sure what to think of Blockchain. It’s an interesting mathematical idea, but not sure I like it as a practical item. It’s coming in SQL Server 2022, and it’s also becoming more mainstream. The thing that made me think we should understand this better was the renaming of the Staples Center to the Crypto.com arena. No matter what you think of the tech, spending the money on advertising means there is plenty of revenue and profit in this area. From a data perspective, worth knowing something about how this works.

For most of 2021, it felt like an extended 2020. Vaccination opened some things up, but the world didn’t return to normal. Many companies continued to avoid forcing people back into offices, but not all. I have some friends back in the office every day and even more that are required to go every week. I don’t know where 2022 will bring us, but I hope it’s a flexible blend of in-person and remote work. It might not work for everyone, but for many of us working with data, we can certainly get a lot done remotely. We proved that in 2020 and again in 2021.

This was a good year for me, and I hope you can say the same thing. I’m off for the rest of the year, but I wish you a Happy New Year and look forward to seeing more of you in 2022.

Steve Jones

Listen to the podcast at Libsyn, Stitcher, Spotify, or iTunes.

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End of the Year Stats

I track some data from my life, some purposefully, some randomly from various services. Here are some areas to look back at this year.

Reading

I read a lot. It’s an escape for me from a busy life and a good hobby. I track my books on Goodreads and tag the ones I finish with the year in which I finish them. As of a couple days before Christmas, I was at 117 in the 2021 tag. Quite a bt of growth in books read:

  • 2021 – 117
  • 2020 – 82
  • 2019 – 128
  • 2018 – 79

Before this I wasn’t tagging.

Fitness

I try to work out regularly. A few items from 2021

  • 328 workouts
  • 118,736 kcal burned
  • 225:32 hours working out
  • 319 miles of distance. Unfortunately yoga and weightlifting don’t cover distance Winking smile

Not a great year, but not bad. I was hoping to be above 365. I tend to do do things on weightlifting days, so I’ve missed too many days this year.

Music

I love listening to music. I’ve had lots of music players, and went with an iPhone a few times specifically because the music support was better. These days I am mostly on Spotify, which is a fantastic service for me. It’s in the Tesla, on my devices, and I’ve got stuff playing often.

I love the wrap up from Spotify this year. A few stats:

  • 33,449 minutes listening
  • Top song – 3 Nights (36 listens) (also Old Town Road, California Dreaming, Who Says, and Short Skirt)
  • Top artists – John Mayer (2,243 minutes), with Beatles, Jay-Z, Notorius BIG and Stevie Wonder rounding out the list.
  • Top genre – Classic Rock (lots of guitar riffs I like here)

Language

  • 30,043 XP (experience points)
  • Top 1% of learners
  • French and Japanese
  • 5978 minutes learning (99.6 hours)
  • 85 minutes on one day
  • 1074 words learned, probably more Japanese
  • 334 days when the stats came, 575 days on a streak. I used 2 streak savers in 2021, 3 in 2020, so not really all those days.
  • 258 days in the Diamond league (top league)

I got this icon/image/prize:

2021-12-06 09_44_49-YEAR IN REVIEW

Travel

With the pandemic still going on and not many events, I didn’t think I’d travel much, but I ended up with a good year.

  • 12 trips for me
  • 1 new country (Belgium)
  • 1 UK trip
  • 3 trips to Florida
  • 5 work trips
  • 48 trips according to Google

The spread in the US:

2021-12-20 15_41_25-Timeline

We ended up with 4 or 5 trips in the living quarters, camping out in various places.

20210727_202028

Not bad, and hoping for more in 2022.

I also renewed my United 1K status. With a few trips and some promotions from them, I ended up back at the top tier that can be earned. That’s good as I hope to get back to more travel in 2022 and would prefer to get upgrades across the ocean.

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