Randy said:
I'm an Intermediate (at best) user of Access 2003. I'm trying to determine
the best way to resize - for lack of a better word - a shared (Workgroup)
database. The database in question has already been split and currently the
backend database is upwards of 300 MB. Is it possible to further split the
database or archive historical content? Any guidance would be appreciated.
I'm with Larry. Are you experiencing performance problems? If not
then keep on as you are.
BTW do you have graphics or other embedded objects in the tables?
How many records in some of those tables?
I'm not a fan of archiving data because it's a pain in the ***. If
folks want historical data then you have to point the reports to the
historical data. And comparing historical data to current data is a
pain.
However you may have very valid business reasons to upsize to SQL
Server. Your big concern is how mission critical is the data and can
the data be rekeyed if you lose a day.
Mission critical means can you afford to lose an hour if the database
is down? Frequently the data can't be rekeyed. A classic example
being a call centre where you are receiving incoming calls.
Losing a day means that if you have to restore from backup do your
users have the paperwork in place so they can rekey the data? Are
there enough staff to re-enter that data?
I recall a posting by someone working for a large casino/hotel
operation in the mid to late 80s stating to what lengths they spend
over a million dollars duplicating their IBM S/38 mini-computer in
another offsite location with data inserts and updates being copied
from the main system to the backup system in under a second.
Thier attitude was that they could never afford to lose a room
reservation. Imagine the mess if they lost a days worth of phone
calls. <shudder> And the newspaper stories by the upset clients.
And expenses while they placate the customers so they don't go to the
newspapers. <smile>
Tony
--
Tony Toews, Microsoft Access MVP
Please respond only in the newsgroups so that others can
read the entire thread of messages.
Microsoft Access Links, Hints, Tips & Accounting Systems at
http://www.granite.ab.ca/accsmstr.htm
Tony's Microsoft Access Blog -
http://msmvps.com/blogs/access/