Here I’m, preparing my luggage for this trip and enjoying my family for few moments. This will be my second conference in 2 weeks. This kind of situation is a little new for me due that I was a speaker in the past just for a few and small conferences, and If you asked me few months ago if I’ll be doing this kind of Conference Tours I’ll told you “NOOO”, are you crazy?
Now I’m starting to enjoy it (probably I’m crazy already, who knows?), and I’ll try to do more and more conferences next year as possible.
I will keep all you guys informed about any news and very soon I’ll post some new pictures from this beautiful part of the World locate in the East Coast of Australia.
I just hope to have better flights this time, because I’m a little scare after some nice experiences I got on my flights to and from Perth.
1st, when traveling to Perth, my seat was located in the aisle side and the lady in my left side was using her seat and ½ of mine seat also. You can’t imagine how I felt that 5 hours of it, any time any person or flight attendant passed thru the aisle they hit me, because half of my body was haggling out my seat.
2nd, when traveling back I requested a nice window seat, great one more time the flight was full , and to my happy night my seat was damaged and the recline button was not working, can you imagine have 5 nice hours trying to sleep on this situation ? (23:30 to 5:00 AM :( flight to Sidney)
Cheers,
Francisco Munoz Alvarez
If you are using LINUX/Windows the hostname credentials should be the same user who has installed the oracle database software, if Windows the user you are using need to be member of the ORA_DBA group and have Local Security privilege ‘Log on as a batch job’.
What you need to do is go to:
Start—->
Programs—->
Admin tools—->
Local security policy —>
Local policies —>
User rights assignments
In the list to your right, look for ‘Log on as a batch job’, double click and add the same OS local user you using to access OEM web to the group.
I hope this tips will help you solve your problem
Cheers,
Francisco Munoz Alvarez
“Real Application Testing is Now Available for Earlier Releases“
Oracle Database 11g introduced Database Replay and SQL Performance Analyzer as part of the Real Application Testing option to enable businesses identifies issues with system changes before production deployment in other words, Oracle Real Application Testing facilitates the testing and validation of system changes by recording a workload from a production system and replaying it with all the original characteristics such as timing, concurrency, and transaction dependencies, on another system for testing purposes, also it will analyze the impact of a change on application performance by identifying degraded SQL statements and advising how to remediate them.
When released, the only previous release of Oracle that you was allowed to use it was 10.2.0.4. Now RAT is available for earlier (for pre-11g database) release like:
- 9.2.0.8,
- 10.2.0.2,
- 10.2.0.3.
This are great news for us, and will allow us to test and get more information to evaluate any probably upgrade to 11g.
This functionality for pre-11g database releases is installed using the “opatch” utility and following instructions for the generic and platform specific in the “README” for the patches.For more information and to know what patches you will need to use, please refer to Metalink Note: 560977.1
Cheers,
Francisco Munoz Alvarez