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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Patrick O'Neil (Professor of Computer Science, University of Massachusetts, Boston, USA) , Elizabeth O'Neil (Professor of Computer Science, University of Massachusetts, Boston, USA) , Jim GrayPublisher: Elsevier Science & Technology Imprint: Morgan Kaufmann Publishers In Edition: 2nd Revised edition Dimensions: Width: 18.70cm , Height: 4.70cm , Length: 23.50cm Weight: 1.700kg ISBN: 9781558604384ISBN 10: 1558604383 Pages: 870 Publication Date: 09 May 2000 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Unknown Availability: Out of stock ![]() Table of ContentsReviewsThe chapter on object-relational database should be a great selling point for the book. No one else has the coverage on object relational that this chapter has; for example, the other new texts emphasize the purely object model. I think that the approach here is much more practical. Betty Salzberg, Northeastern University The coverage of this book is wonderful, especially the cutting-edge of object-relational systems ... [and] this is the only text I have seen that is not by Jeffrey Ullman that treats the theoretical material appropriately. The chapter on dependencies and relational design is excellent. Examples abound, the explanations are crisp and clear, and the appropriate concepts are discussed. I cannot wait to use it. Bill Grosky, Wayne State University This book makes an excellent text for anyone just approaching database systems. It's both an accessible refresher for those of us who have not been paying careful attention to developments in this area and a useful reference for designers and implementers who need just-in-time education. Jim Gray, Microsoft Research This book is excellent! Mike Hartstein, Oracle Corporation, Senior Director of Oracle8i Product Management The chapter on object-relational database should be a great selling point for the book. No one else has the coverage on object relational that this chapter has; for example, the other new texts emphasize the purely object model. I think that the approach here is much more practical. - Betty Salzberg, Northeastern University The coverage of this book is wonderful, especially the cutting-edge of object-relational systems ... [and] this is the only text I have seen that is not by Jeffrey Ullman that treats the theoretical material appropriately. The chapter on dependencies and relational design is excellent. Examples abound, the explanations are crisp and clear, and the appropriate concepts are discussed. I cannot wait to use it. - Bill Grosky, Wayne State University This book makes an excellent text for anyone just approaching database systems. It's both an accessible refresher for those of us who have not been paying careful attention to developments in this area and a useful reference for designers and implementers who need just-in-time education. - Jim Gray, Microsoft Research This book is excellent! - Mike Hartstein, Oracle Corporation, Senior Director of Oracle8i Product Management The chapter on object-relational database should be a great selling point for the book. No one else has the coverage on object relational that this chapter has; for example, the other new texts emphasize the purely object model. I think that the approach here is much more practical. - Betty Salzberg, Northeastern University The coverage of this book is wonderful, especially the cutting-edge of object-relational systems ... [and] this is the only text I have seen that is not by Jeffrey Ullman that treats the theoretical material appropriately. The chapter on dependencies and relational design is excellent. Examples abound, the explanations are crisp and clear, and the appropriate concepts are discussed. I cannot wait to use it. - Bill Grosky, Wayne State University This book makes an excellent text for anyone just approaching database systems. It's both an accessible refresher for those of us who have not been paying careful attention to developments in this area and a useful reference for designers and implementers who need just-in-time education. - Jim Gray, Microsoft Research This book is excellent! - Mike Hartstein, Oracle Corporation, Senior Director of Oracle8i Product Management Author Information"Patrick O'Neil is a professor of computer science at the University of Massachusetts at Boston. He is responsible for a number of important research results in transactional performance and disk access algorithms, and he holds patents for his work in these and other database areas. Author of ""The Set Query Benchmark"" (in The Benchmark Handbook for Database and Transaction Processing Systems, also from Morgan Kaufmann) and an area editor for Information Systems, O'Neil is also an active industry consultant who has worked with a number of prominent companies, including Microsoft, Oracle, Sybase, Informix, Praxis, Price Waterhouse, and Policy Management Systems Corporation. Elizabeth O'Neil is also a professor of computer science at the University of Massachusetts at Boston. She serves as a consultant to Sybase IQ in Concord, Massachusetts, and has worked with a number of other corporations, including Microsoft and Bolt, Beranek, and Newman. From 1980 to 1998 she implemented and managed new hardware and software labs in the Computer Science Department of the University of Massachusetts at Boston." Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |