Category: SAS

SAS 9.1, Windows 2003, I/O and 32 bit limitations

Over the lastest year or two we have had ongoing issues running SAS 9.1 on 32 bit windows. Main two issues that constantly arise are: Metadata server exceeding addressable memory in 32 bit windows and crashing I/O errors intermittently reading/writing SAS datasets We have tried all the SAS “support” tools to reduce the size of our metadata […]

New Targeted Admin Courses from SAS

Checking my inbox today I saw an email from SAS Education with new course dates for 2010/2011. What really caught my eye was the addition of these new short (1-2 day) targeted admin courses: SAS Enterprise Guide: Administration SAS OLAP Environment: Administration SAS Enterprise Miner: Administration It’s great to see more admin training available from […]

Example 8.7: Hosmer and Lemeshow goodness-of-fit

The Hosmer and Lemeshow goodness of fit (GOF) test is a way to assess whether there is evidence for lack of fit in a logistic regression model. Simply put, the test compares the expected and observed number of events in bins defined by the predicted p…

Keys to good macro design

On the final day of SESUG 2010, I only had time to attend one presentation. I chose Frank DiIorio’s %whatChanged: A Tool for the Well-Behaved Macro for two reasons: 1.) Papers about macros are big hits with SAS Tech Report readers and 2.) DiIori…

A little code from SESUG 2010

William Benjamin Jr. (Bill after you get to know him) is a SAS author and longtime SAS user. His was another title that I felt SAS users would really want to hear about. Benjamin presented Leave Your Bad Code Behind: 50 Ways to Make Your SAS Code …

Speeding up Web Report Studio (9.1/3.1) by jumping in puddles

When SAS 9.2 was released one of the changes SAS made was to change the default setting for WRS from using a standard workspace server to a pooled workspace server. This was to improve performance as pooled workspace servers remove the requirement for sas executables (sas.exe) to start and stop for each query, and therefore […]

Keep track of that

I’ve been a longtime fan of the WNYC radio show, Radio Lab.
Hosts Robert Krulwich and Jad Abumrad
have interviewed famed biologist
E.O. Wilson
a few times. Listening to him describe
his study of ants and how they make tracks and trails is a great story of perseverance and attention to detail.
E.O. Wilson had a bit of a head start on us, but here at SAS, we’re pretty good at tracking bugs, too.

Continue reading “Keep track of that”

Keep track of that

I’ve been a longtime fan of the WNYC radio show, Radio Lab. Hosts Robert Krulwich and Jad Abumrad have interviewed famed biologist E.O. Wilson a few times. Listening to him describe his study of ants and how they make tracks and trails is a great story…