Beautifully explained, should have given chance for another guy to talk...looks like he knows a lot also :) worth to watch and rewatch n times :) thanks
"fundamentals, introduction, concepts" - all seemed to be missing from the video. This is information that drops in like randomly opening a text book and reading some random disconnected geek driven gobbledygook. Even the part where the spread sheet crossover comparison was vague and elusive. It helps to pick a niche audience, know what and why they might give a rip and deliver useful information so they can achieve or perform or understand things in a new way. Is this "introduction" for business people who don't know what a database is? Is it for developers that know what SQL is and want more information, or is it for little old ladies needing moon landing music to fall asleep by? Sometimes SME's don't get it. Who are you talking to and why do they need to know what you have to share? By the way. . . a SME is an abreviation for Subject Matter Expert. It's a common Instructional Design term for the people who have all the technical knowledge but live in a bubble in super-whizzy land.
These MVA videos are not very good. People can get more information from spending 29 minutes reading an introductory book on relational databases or SQL Server than they can get by watching this.
6yrs, ---- need to update for changes to exam and MS SQL server versions Also. way too much unrelated conversational byplay. And the whoa, wait, I'm not smart enough for that concept, lets go back over that: Don't, Just Don't