About Kalen Delaney
I have been working with SQL Server for over 21 years, starting
with my employment with the Sybase Corporation in October 1987. The first
chapter of the first two Inside SQL Server books that I worked on contained all
kinds of juicy details about the beginning of SQL Server with Sybase, and the
author of the book's first edition, Ron Soukup, was very much involved in the
original joint product. I was also there, in the other half of the arena! I was
working in Sybase Technical Support when the first OS/2 SQL Server was set up
in one of our labs. Those were the days... Although this history chapter is not
included with SQL Server 2008 Internals, you can find Chapter 1 from Inside SQL
Server 2000
here.
I worked for Sybase as a Technical Support Analyst for two
years, and then transferred to the Education Department. I taught all the
Sybase courses, and was the specialist for the advanced course on Performance
Tuning and Optimization.
In 1992 I became an independent trainer and consultant, after my
family moved from the San Francisco Bay Area to the Beautiful Pacific
Northwest. Since then, I have worked with both the Microsoft and Sybase
companies to develop courses and to do internal training for their Technical
Support staff. I was the Primary Subject Matter Expert (SME) for two Microsoft
courses: 608: New Features of Microsoft SQL Server 6.5, and 665: SQL Server 6.5
Performance Tuning and Optimization. In 1998 I developed an internal course for
Microsoft's product support team, to help them learn the internals and new
features of SQL Server 7 and I did something similar for SQL Server 2000. I
delivered these courses for many years, to various Microsoft offices and
partners around the country and around the world. Today, I have my own custom
course on
SQL Server 2008/2005 Architecture, Internals and Query
Tuning, which I teach both privately and publicly to clients around the
world. You can see my schedule
here.
In
1993, Microsoft awarded me the MVP (Most Valuable Professional) designation for
my participation in the public SQL Server help forums on Microsoft's news
server (msnews.microsoft.com). I am still regular participant on the public
forums, especially Microsoft's public news server, answering many questions
dealing with SQL Server internals and behavior.
I have been writing about SQL Server for over 15 years, in
addition to courseware development. Prior to writing my first Inside SQL Server
book I was a coauthor of SAMS' SQL Server 6.5 Unleashed (Oct 96) and SQL Server
in 21 Days (Feb 98), also from SAMS.
I wrote a regular monthly column on SQL Server
Internals for Pinnacle Publishing's SQL Server Professional Journal from
October 95 to September 98. have written articles for Windows ITPro Magazine
(formerly Windows Magazine), from Penton Media (windowsITPro.com) In mid-1998 I
joined the editorial staff of Penton's newest publication, SQL Server Magazine,
which made its debut in February 99. You can get a list of all my articles for
SQL Server Magazine
here.
On numerous occasions I have been invited by Microsoft to
present special internal training. I have spoken at Microsoft Technical
Education Conference (TechEd), and worked in the SQL Server Lab at several
conferences.
In early 1999 I was asked to participate in the
original planning committee to form a non-profit, international SQL Server
Users' Group. Out of that planning committee, the
Professional Association for
SQL Server (PASS) was born. I served as the Director of Program Development
for the first two years, and spoke at the inaugural conference in Chicago in
September 1999. I have spoken at every PASS conference since that time, usually
presenting both a pre-conference seminar and a regular conference session.
My academic background centers around UC Berkeley, where I
earned a BA in Linguistics and a MS in Computer Science. My training/teaching
career goes back to my graduate school days when I was a Teaching Assistant in
the Computer Science 101 courses at Berkeley. I started teaching classes on my
own during my last year of graduate school, and then I taught for four years at
Mills College in Oakland, California. At Mills, I taught the entire range of
undergraduate courses, except for compilers. I taught Assembly language, data
structures and operating systems, in addition to the basic programming classes.
I also developed and taught Mills' first course in database management systems.
I then left Mills to return to UC Berkeley as a Lecturer, and I taught full
time at Berkeley until I joined Sybase and my life with SQL Server
began.