Being Professional

I often write about data professionals, meaning those people who work with data and are paid to do so. Certainly some of you might be amateurs, doing data work as a hobby, but most of the people that visit SQLServerCentral work with data as a part of their career.

The second part of that title is the “professional” part. What does it mean to be a professional? I saw some thoughts from Randolph West recently that caught my eye. He talks about treating others as you’d like to be treated, which is a good place to start for most of us.

However, there are other considerations for being a professional in Internet age. Randolph covers a few, in terms of respecting others’ form of address, their time, and their own struggles. The world of work has blurred with personal time, especially when most of us are not in the same physical location, and our “environment” might include people that don’t actually work for the same organization.

I’ll add a couple more items here that I think are important to being a professional these days. While we do understand that children, pets, and more might interrupt meetings, understand that security and privacy for our organization (and its data) is important. Lock your machines, watch what you share out loud, and caution your “co-workers” against sharing things that might be secure or sensitive.

In line with that, be aware that you might accidentally share something from your personal life on a video call. While you don’t need to wear a suit and tie, you might ensure that you are not wearing something inappropriate. Certainly there is a running joke that people at home might not wear pants. Whether you do or not, be aware that standing up without pants wouldn’t be very respectful. It might also be career limiting.

As we continue to move forward in work and life, with the challenges of both always and never being at work, for some or all of us, be professional to each other likely means being respectful, understanding, appreciative, and sensitive to others.

It’s not my world; it’s not your world. It’s our world.

Steve Jones

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

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The PASS Pro Videos are Live

The PASS Pro program was an interesting educational opportunity that came out last year. A number of people subscribed, including me. I did this more to support the org than for the content, but I did want to watch the videos and learn some new skills.

When Redgate Software purchased the assets, this was one of the first things we wanted to release. The process took a couple weeks, but you can now access the materials for free.

All the courses were added to the Redgate University, as this was the easiest way to organize them on our side. You watch each of these for free:

You can now work through these courses, without the quiz gates, and just view the material.

I do hope we get the quizzes live, but for now, you can access these for free.

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Daily Coping 22 Feb 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 eat something new and healthy today.

A few weeks ago, I was in the Colorado mountains with my wife. We were late getting started, and stopped to grab a bite to eat as an early lunch. I decided to try and eat better here and chose a “power bowl” from a restaurant. It was a combination of rice and quinoa with a number of vegetables piled on. I thought it was delicious, in addition to being visually appealing, and decided to duplicate some of it at home.

I grabbed these ingredients at home the next week and have had this for lunch a few times, assembling things for me and my wife:

  • mixed greens (instead of the rice/quinoa)
  • cucumber (chopped)
  • tomatoes ( I prefer smaller ones, sliced in half)
  • avocado – sliced or cut into chunks
  • red onion – thinly sliced
  • chicken – sautéed with salt, pepper, dash cumin, paprika, garlic powder
  • calmata olives
  • feta cheese
  • balsamic vinaigrette

I tend to cut the cucumber, tomato, and onion up and keep a couple days worth in plastic. I’ll do the chicken up, but chop up a couple portions on demand. I use chunk feta and olives in separate containers and then add them as needed. I prefer more feta, and my wife doesn’t like olives, so I customize those.

I’ll usually cut open an avocado and slice that with chicken. The rest I assemble in a bowl on top of greens, add some dressing, and then toss. Usually I’ll just use two bowls if my wife is eating, and do each next to the other.

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Coding Tips

I really like Visual Studio Code. The more I use it, the more I get comfortable in it, and the more I appreciate the design and flow of using the editor. I didn’t feel that way early on, preferring the comfort of Visual Studio, but now I most often use VS Code.

The other day I saw an article from one of the PMs for the product, with a number of tips and tricks. I like some of these, and have already found a few to be handy in my work. I’ve even started to search out a few more of these, and found this repo with items in it.

This reminds me of a few articles at SQLServerCentral on SSMS (tips, tricks). I’ve written a bit on Azure Data Studio and git, often to help cement some skills in my mind, as much as to help you learn more.

I’m sure many of you have your own tips and tricks today, for both data platform tools and others, so I’m asking you to share a few in the comments. If you have a large collection of tips, on tools or just how to write code, write us an article. I’m sure others would love to know how to be more productive.

Steve Jones

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

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