Patrice writes
> When I took sociology they decried the use of what they 
> called "policy science", where someone has an objective but 
> wants to find the best way to get there.  (e.g. "we want the 
> best education system at a budget reduced by 15 percent."  
> Then they turn around an talk about "improving" the education 
> system, or medicare, or... you name it.)  They do this a lot 
> in public policy.  They rarely ask:  "What level of funding 
> is ideal for delivery of the following standards of services?"  

I, at the risk of seeming heretical - but hey I am an economics grad and
was an accountant so I'm comfortable with that - find this unhelpful.
The objective 'I have the following resources available to me - how can
I best use them?' sounds correct to me. Your alternative question ' How
many resources do I need to deliver the outcome x - changing how I
provide x is not an option' sounds like a recipe for waste and
inefficiency. Consider that Connor's excellent choose_a_hit_ratio script
essentially asks 'what resources do I need for the following outcome?'
and then consumes them. 

> I still haven't seen an honest comparison of SQL Server vs. 
> Oracle vs. DB2 vs. Informix vs. SyBase vs. MySQL that I can trust.

Here's mine of Oracle vs SQL Server. How honest it is you can judge
yourself. 

"Both will do most jobs, with Oracle excelling in the high-end, highly
available marketplace. MSSQL costs far less, both in purchase and TCO
and excels in the 2-4 processor predictable corporate environment
without a HA requirement." 

Cheers

Niall 

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Author: Niall Litchfield
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