Matt Nunn
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Matt Nunn is a senior product manager for Visual Studio Team System and is responsible for Visual Studio Team Edition for Database Professionals. Previously, he worked as a technical manager and consultant using various platforms to develop database applications that use SQL Server. He spent more than three years on Microsoft's SQL Server team.
Email address: mattnunn@microsoft.com
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17 results found for Matt Nunn, displaying items 1 - 17
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January 22, 2007 |
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Better Support for Application Developers
Team Data isn't just for database developers. The tool's version-control functionality can help application developers write more efficient and accurate database access code.
SQL Server Magazine
Data You Can Rely On
This month Matt follows up his discussion on setting up baselines and creating a set of unit tests by explaining the steps for building a reliable set of data.
SQL Server Magazine
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October 25, 2006 |
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Put Your Database to the Test
Last month's column, "Explosive Source Control," focused on the first step in creating a baseline for your database in Team Data. This month, Matt explains the second half of the process and shows how you can set up database unit tests.
SQL Server Magazine
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August 23, 2006 |
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Database Development Teams: The Great Divide
Microsoft Visual Studio Team Edition for Database Professionals (Team Data) could help break down walls between database development teams, but teams won't find common ground until they make an effort to understand each other.
SQL Server Magazine
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June 21, 2006 |
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The Power to Control Change
How do you control database schema changes? Visual Studio Team Edition for Database Professionals integrates database pros into the application life cycle and facilitates managing database change in an offline, source- and version-controlled environment.
SQL Server Magazine
The Proof Is in the Productivity
SQL Server 2005 took the test and, with the help of a few key features, keeps its promise to be more productive than SQL Server 2000 and Oracle 10g R2.
SQL Server Magazine
Peer-to-Peer: The Next Replication Generation
Peer-to-peer transactional replication is the direct descendant of SQL Server 2000’s bi-directional transactional replication. But this newer version of the technology provides improved availability and scalability as well as simplified setup wizards.
SQL Server Magazine
Get Out the Big Guns
Some SQL Server 2005 features could change the way you think about database systems, but these features might take some work. Take a look at some of the changes you’ll see when you use the SQLCLR and Service Broker.
SQL Server Magazine
Just a Spoonful of Sugar...
Many of SQL Server’s new features aren’t automatic, but require some effort on your part to work. Here are some that deliver great benefits with only the smallest effort.
SQL Server Magazine
Time to Celebrate!
The road to the release of SQL Server 2005 and Visual Studio 2005 has been long, but the tight integration between the two products means developers have never had it so good.
SQL Server Magazine
Something for (Almost) Nothing
With SQL Server 2005, some of the coolest features are available immediately, with little or no effort from you!
SQL Server Magazine
Putting the “Smart” Into Smart Clients
New BI tools in SQL Server 2005 let end users report and learn from data and give developers the ability to embed data mining in applications.
SQL Server Magazine
A Report Builder for Everyone
Report Builder is an end-user reporting tool that lets business users create Reporting Services reports without using Visual Studio. Learn how this tools works and how it can simplify your life.
SQL Server Magazine
Beyond SQLXML
For Microsoft's SQL Server development team, enabling Web services for SQL Server 2005 was important enough to warrant native support for the feature. Learn how you can use Web services support to improve interoperability and application connectivity.
SQL Server Magazine
Extending XML in SQL Server 2005
XML has become the standard format for transporting data. SQL Server 2005 offers native XML support--along with a new XML data type--that offers flexible data storage and gives you new ways to think about application and database design.
SQL Server Magazine
Seeing the CLR's Potential
The SQL Server CLR draws strong reactions from all camps. If you know how to use it judiciously, you'll see great rewards.
SQL Server Magazine
Back to SQL Server's Future
SQL Server Senior Product Manager Matt Nunn reviews database evolution to help us understand the revolutionary nature of the new SQL Server 2005 features that make the database server an integral component of application architecture.
SQL Server Magazine
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