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Mike Davis
Mike Davis, MCITP, is a BI Architect and Managing Project Lead at Pragmatic Works. Mike is an experienced speaker and has presented at many events such as several SQL Server User Groups across the US, Code Camps, SQL Server Launches, and SQL Saturday events. Mike is an active member at his local... show more



Mike Davis, MCITP, is a BI Architect and Managing Project Lead at Pragmatic Works. Mike is an experienced speaker and has presented at many events such as several SQL Server User Groups across the US, Code Camps, SQL Server Launches, and SQL Saturday events. Mike is an active member at his local user group (JSSUG) in Jacksonville, FL.

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Birth date: January 01, 1946
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Community Reviews
Chris' Fish Place
Chris' Fish Place rated it 9 years ago
Seriously, because once you read this, the Olympics looks even worse. Davis' book is very readable and wonderfully cited information about slums. It looks at the development and how various governments respond to it. If you have read Behind the Beautiful Forevers, this is a good companion to that...
Geeky Girl's Graveyard Reads
Geeky Girl's Graveyard Reads rated it 10 years ago
The Sea of Ash is told from a first person perspective by a school teacher who has won the lottery and taken up a hobby of collecting rare books. He has become obsessed with a rare copy of a Victorian doctor's journal. The teacher goes on a journey to see the sites that are described within the jour...
AC
AC rated it 13 years ago
Dry, statistical -- familiar ground, and a bit out of date (published 2006 and based on projections going back to 2004). Davis blames IMF shock policies over the internally driven tendency of modern "silicon" capitalism to decouple production growth from employment -- which is not fully persuasive. ...
Vilja Reads
Vilja Reads rated it 13 years ago
I'm not sure if I'm qualified to give stars to an academic work, so I won't.Read this book.
DanAllosso
DanAllosso rated it 14 years ago
This is a scary book. The genocidal imperialists in this story are the British (and briefly, the Americans in the Philippines), but dial the clock ahead a hundred years and it’s all us. Seriously. Davis begins his story with a description of ex-president Ulysses Grant’s “family vacation” around t...
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