There is this sense that with a Basic Availability Group (Or, For Allan, an Availability Group in SQL Server Standard), you lose a lot of features. The other answer was from another friend who repeated something I hear all the time in the community. While I have a lot of sympathy for my friend Allan who loves naming conventions and getting things spot-on, the “Basic” term is well entrenched (just do a google search for “Basic Availability Groups” you’ll find a lot of links to Microsoft – and not just the marketing pages, but the docs). Microsoft needed a way to distinguish the AGs we all know and loved from the implementation available in SQL Server Standard – which is, effectively, the exact same thing only with a few limitations. The pre-created material I was teaching made this big deal about “Basic” and “Advanced” availability groups. Along with his useful and helpful comments was one I’ve been seeing from him a lot lately – in short – “THERE IS NO BASIC!” now I see his point. One was from the legendary Allan Hirt, who is the person I instantly think of when it comes to SQL Server HA/DR every time.
He got a couple of answers from a couple friends in the SQL Server community. The short story – someone was asking some questions about Basic Availability Groups.
#Exchange 2019 standard vs enterprise series
Since High Availability and Disaster Recovery topics are on my mind as I just wrapped up delivering an online class on SQL Server HA/DR last week and am preparing for my next free webinar series talking about HA/DR, that twitter thread piqued my interest. NSE also rolled out unquoted securities platform (USP) earlier in the year.I was having a twitter interaction the other day. The separation paved the way for the introduction of new products including covered short selling. The NSE in October 2019 commissioned a new trading system that allowed for separation of the trading and post trading activities. The day trading is the latest innovation for the NSE, which has been riding on technology to launch new products such as derivatives and gold exchange traded funds. This will significantly increase our turnovers and attract more investors to the bourse,” said Kiprono Kittony, chairman at NSE. “Day trading will allow investors to trade on one position, two or three times per day. NSE said the benefit of discounted levies will be enjoyed by the investors directly through their trading accounts. The second leg is when the same shares are sold. For instance, the first leg is when buys shares. In trading, a leg is a single position taken in trading. NSE has offered a discounted levy of 0.114 per cent on the second leg of such transaction compared to the usual 0.12 per cent as it seeks to promote the uptake. Share prices usually react when such events happen when the market is open, meaning that significant moves will now benefit day traders. This will give investors a chance to profit from events that trigger short-term share movements such as when companies announce results, key executives exit abruptly or government announces new policies.Įvents such as imposition of interest rate caps and later on its removal as well as discovery of Covid-19 in Kenya and the containment measures that followed all led to movements in share prices. Kenya, US teams test terror response preparedness Keveye Girls on the rampage, say school treating their security lightly State to pay lawyers for poor robbery with violence suspects, orders Koomeįoreign investors pull Sh1.5 billion from Nairobi bourse