Skip to main content

Iconic cars at the California Automobile Museum in Sacramento

1967 Chevy Camaro and 1967 Mustang Boss 302 are iconic American cars that have fans and fanatics all over the world. Both cars have been the topic of debate among car enthusiasts of all ages and eras. Many have dreamed of driving, owning, sitting or just seeing it in person. Many had posters of these cars through adolescence and adulthood, dreaming about them.

They sit side by side in this quaint automobile museum in downtown Sacramento for a contest - Mustang Vs. Camaro: What side are you on? 





Both cars are fast, stylish and great drag racing cars. They are pony cars. They do one thing very well and that is - drag racing. If I must pick one vs the other, the only thing different about them truly is the looks. The Mustang stands out on looks. I vote for the Mustang of course.



Popular posts from this blog

Create #VirtualPrivateCloud, NAT Instance and NAT Gateways on @AWSCloud

Create a Virtual Private Cloud, NAT instance and the new NAT Gatweay ... and making it all work. This is a YouTube playlist of three videos.

Cheat sheet to create a #VPC and Subnets on @AWSCloud

One of the critical things to remember for working with a AWS VPC is creating and using it. I had hard time remembering how to do it, so, I wrote down a cheat sheet for myself.  If anyone wants to follow along, just navigate to the VPC page on the AWS Console and start with 'Create VPC' button. Please note that this may cost some dollars if you are not on the free tier. If you are on the free tier and make mistakes, it may cost some dollars. In the steps below, we will be creating the following on a new VPC: An internet gateway One public subnet with routes for accessibility from the internet One private subnet without any routes One EC2 web server with Apache installed in it and serving a sample html page - using the public subnet. One EC2 server with the private subnet and security group that allows access to resources running on the public subnet only.  Create VPC Name tag: myVPC CIDR Block: 10.0.0.0/16 Tenancy: default (Must have default. Otherwise, i...

SQL Server tables with JSON

We can indeed store json data as-is into a traditional Microsoft SQL Server database. The document hosted on Microsoft's site left a lot of questions and unknowns that I had to explore and experiment to figure out the right recipe for creating a table to store json, inserting the data as json and querying for the values of individual keys within the json. Here you go:  --Create a table with an identity column and a nvarchat(max) column to store the individual json documents create table dbo.logs (     _id bigint primary key identity,     json_log nvarchar(max) ); --Add a constraint to the json_log column of the table to ensure that the table accepts only json as value to store ALTER TABLE dbo.logs ADD CONSTRAINT [json_log record should be formatted as JSON] CHECK (ISJSON(json_log)=1); --Insert json into the table insert into dbo.logs values ('{"key": "value"}'); insert into dbo.logs values ('{"key": "value1"}'); --Query for al...