George
On Monday, November 25, 2002, at 08:52 PM, Ilia A. wrote:
On November 25, 2002 08:44 pm, George Schlossnagle wrote:Is your claim that db2 has no international error messages? It does, orUhm, did I say anything about i18n in DB2 or SQLServer, no. I merely pointed
did last I checked. Or was it that SQLServer doesn't either (it does
as well).
out that Oracle's status as most powerful database is in the eye of the
beholder.
Ilia
On Monday, November 25, 2002, at 08:24 PM, Ilia A. wrote:On November 25, 2002 08:15 pm, Maxim Maletsky wrote:On Tue, 26 Nov 2002 00:30:55 +0200 (EET) Jani Taskinen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:Just forget this. I'm not native english speaker, but I REALLY don't want to see any errors in any other language but english. (does Perl/Python/etc have multi-lingual errors btw?)--JaniThe world's most powerful database server does - Oracle. And, just type something out of the place and you will get them dozens :)That's arguable, there are many people who would say the same about IBM's DB2. According to TPC (http://www.tpc.org/tpcc/results/tpcc_perf_results.asp) Microsoft SQL Server 2000 is faster and has lower cost per transaction. So claims about greatness of Oracle and greatly exaggerated. Ilia -- PHP Development Mailing List <http://www.php.net/> To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php-- PHP Development Mailing List <http://www.php.net/> To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
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