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Team Greystone GT and Oracle MySQL Database Service with HeatWave score maiden race win with Mason and Lancaster in GT Cup! For racing, as for the cloud, performance matters; and a few second faster will make a difference between win and lose. Greystone GT became race winners for the first time as Rich Mason, SVP of MySQL Global Business Unit Sales, and Jon Lancaster scored an extraordinary GT Cup victory on a chaotic weekend at Silverstone. See the video and read the blog.
30 TB TPCH, MySQL HeatWave is faster and cheaper than its cloud competitors. See how HeatWave is 6.5X faster than Amazon Redshift, 1400X faster than Amazon Aurora, and 5400X faster than Amazon RDS at a fraction of the cost.
IsoEnergy Streamlines Million-dollar Drill Programs with MySQL "With MySQL Database Service, we don’t need an in-house IT team. We no longer worry about the quality of our data getting compromised once it has been reviewed and uploaded. It's great to be able to access that data in such a simple manner." Justin Rodko, Project Geologist, IsoEnergy
Meritz Fire & Marine Insurance relies on MySQL Enterprise Edition for real-time system inspections, efficient data backup, and recovery.
"The overall experience with MySQL Enterprise Edition has been very positive. I was satisfied with the performance and stability of MySQL. It was impressive to see how well-supported it is in terms of integration with other Oracle products. It helped us reduce our database TCO." Yoon-ki Chang, Deputy Department Head, IT Operations Team, Meritz Fire & Marine Insurance
Obtaining your authentication credentials for connecting to MySQL Server
The MySQL Shell saves your authentication credentials (no longer just passwords) in an obfuscated login path file named .mylogin.cnf. You can find that file in the %APPDATA%\MySQL directory on Windows or the current user's home directory on non-Windows systems. The file can be read later by MySQL client programs, such as the MySQL Shell, to obtain your authentication credentials for connecting to MySQL Server.