(Law) a name under which a corporation conducts business that is not the legal name of the corporation as shown in its articles of incorporation.
1DB2 monitors these indicators and can take actions identified by the DBA.
2Allows the DBA to recover a table to an earlier point in time.
3Alerting the DBA of potential system problems via email or pager
4Allows a DBA to view changes to the database at the transactional level.
5If a DBA installs a new database, your backups should know about it.
6They are not created by the DBA and then assigned to a tablespace.
7Allows a DBA to view changes to the rows of a table over time.
8For DBA group-representative left and right hemisphere images are compared.
9The DBA may not always have direct access to DNS.
10Hanes and DBA were formerly sister companies under the ownership of Sara Lee Corporation.
11DBA Tamiami is one of the 789 dealerships affected.
12This chapter presents this information from first a power user's, then a DBA's, point of view.
13No reliable cytochemical staining could be obtained by DBA regardless of tissue or cell type investigated.
14This is an often-debated topic in DBA circles.
15The DBA configures health indicators using the Health Center, the Web Health Center, the CLP, or APIs.
16Try to get an Informix DBA and an Oracle DBA to agree on what a tablespace is!