Architecture

Azure SQL Synapse: 5 Billion Rows of Lessons Learned

Azure SQL Synapse: 5 Billion Rows of Lessons Learned

I wanted to share my experiences and highlight the things that I found most valuable while creating a Dedicated SQL Pool instance in Azure that is used by one of my clients to query and analyze over 5 billion rows of data. This is not a comprehensive list of the capabilities or best practices for Azure Dedicated SQL Pool. This is more of list of things that got me my best bang for my buck.

Azure Functions vs Web Jobs vs Cloud Services

Azure Functions vs Web Jobs vs Cloud Services

So you have a web app up and running in Azure and now you need to do some background work that’s related to your new web site but it definitely doesn’t belong in the web app itself. This could be anything from importing data, to sending out subscription emails, to updating cached data, or running database maintenance.

You may be wondering, with so many viable options at your fingertips in Azure, what is the best and most cost effective way to get work done? You want to strike the balance between having something that’s powerful enough to grow if it needs to grow but you don’t want to incur a bunch of unnecessary costs right out of the gate by choosing too much power!

Up and Running with Azure Event Hubs

Up and Running with Azure Event Hubs

This past month I finally had a business case that called for Azure Event Hubs to be part of my overall solution to a real-world problem.  Up until this point I was always able to get by mostly with plain old Table Storage Queues and sometimes Service Bus Topics, but the business case I started working on this past month involved sending many megabytes of information from potentially thousands of devices around the clock.

Over Engineering Software Like a Pfifltriggi

Over Engineering Software Like a Pfifltriggi

When you begin the habit of writing code to solve problems that you don't have - that's a real problem.  Joel Spolsky famously called these people Architecture Astronauts.  They create such ambiguous, high-level abstractions in the code that at a certain point the code becomes unreadable and, for all intents and purposes, unmanageable.

There is a somewhat lesser known space trilogy from CS Lewis and in the first book a human from Earth visits a foreign planet that is mainly inhabited by three different classes of physical creatures: the Sorns, the Hrossa, and the Pfifltriggi.  At one point in the story the human asks one of the Sorns (its name is Augray) where he got his impressive oxygen mask from.  Augray answers the human somewhat sheepishly...