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Developers, database administrators and analysts in any vertical market.
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My favorite three things in DbVisualizer are 1 variable replacement and 2 inline export functionality. The time I save exporting my results as a CSV as the query is running is super helpful.
All my settings are now and then lost at a customer installation. Properly due to a change in the server setting, but anyway annoying.
DB Visualizer is very easy to use. It's great that you can save your queries and even if the software is closed and you had forgotten to save the query, it will remember it when the software loads.
Some trouble installing on Linux beacouse of java.
I love the ease of DBVisualizer, everything is there and easy to use. It doesn’t take a lot of training to figure out each capability.
Actually i could think of any function I miss.
One of the features that I like the most from Dbvizualizer is the ability to generate a nice ER diagram from the connected DB and even for specific DB objects.
I do wish when importing from a file it gave a bit more info in what is failing if applicable.
It is has a comprehensive solutions for many types of scenarios and the support is also very quick and responsive in helping you all the time.
Almost as if it has been designed this way. Specifically, I ran into trouble with CPU and Disk IO credits.
Very convenient, very good. I really like their customer service, they are great and very very helpful.
The interface is complex and not very intuitive. Pricing can be hard to understand or calculate ahead of time.
I like how customizable its instances are and the variety that it has is also very great.
The ssh connection is always broke down and complicate firewall punch.
Give good service like comparison facilities,reviews,integration,and their alternatives.features,products.
It is an easy-to-use tool for basic use, however for something more specific it is really complex, the most difficult to learn to use is the console, it has many commands.
Justin: Hi, I'm Justin, DevOps Engineer, and I give O'Reilly Learning Platform four out of five stars. For more reviews like these, please click the link below. Before using O'Reilly, I used a couple of different resources. First, classic paper books. Great as a resource, poor at aging. In this day and age, especially with DevOps technology, paper books age like you wouldn't believe, and use something that was a little bit more up to date. So I tried other learning platforms like A Cloud Guru and Lennox Academy. Great video content, up to date a little bit more, but they didn't have the depth of books. So I needed to have something that gave me access to a lot of books that was very in-depth and up to date. I looked at O'Reilly because I'm familiar with a lot of their books. Over the years I've used I don't know how many O'Reilly books. So I figured they had a service Safari, it is what it used to be called. They've since morphed it into O'Reilly Learning Platform, where they give you so much more than just books. For one subscription, you get access to a whole treasure trove of 200 plus publishers, plus video courses, plus live events you can go to. Nothing else even comes close in terms of the breadth of knowledge you get and the amount of learning styles it covers. Getting started with O'Reilly was pretty simple. They have a great search feature and you can put in a topic like AWS or Linux, and you can see the different types of content that they have. Not just books, but also video series, and talks that are coming up, and all that kind of stuff. You can also search for specific technical questions like, How do I write a for loop in Python? And O'Reilly search is smart enough to know where you need to look for that. Not only in books, but also in videos too, which is really nice. If you're thinking about getting O'Reilly, there are two things you ought to know. First, unlike some digital platforms that give you access to books, you don't get to keep any of the books you have access to. I think PAC and a couple of others tended to do this at least at one point. The other thing is, O'Reilly does not have any sort of cloud-based sandboxes right now. Like A Cloud Guru has a feature where you can spin up a new AWS account just for your personal experimentation for free and try stuff out in it. O'Reilly has sandboxes of their own, but they're basically like individual servers. As far as getting an actual cloud account, that feature is in beta; but as of today, that's not currently available.
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