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Bruce, In a message dated 1/8/99 2:49:05 PM Eastern Standard Time, crashshw@ix.netcom.com writes: > I think most of us really understand the Access is a desktop solution not a > fullon "enterprise" solution. Now, MS sells SQL as its "enterprise" tool; > so, what is your experience and opinion of SQL v6.5 or better yet v7.0 vs. > DB2/400. I think that's more of an apples to apples comparison than Access > vs. DB2/400.( Not that I think it's a perfect matchup but I'm trying to be > non-partisan here). While we're at this debate, how come nobody has > mentioned anything about Oracle/Unix or this a MS bashing rave? During a project less than two years ago, the client hired an Access consulting "guru" to build a consolidated material planning system to run over the LAN. With 9K records (that needed to be consolidated, selected, and ordered) and one user, the application absolutely died. Shortly after completion, the client hired a full time employee with Access experience who quickly determined that the "guru" had used the older 1.x data access methods instead of those inherent with Access 2.x -- after changing out for 2.x methods, the application (still with one user) might actually have been mistaken for being alive by someone not paying close attention. New employee also knew VB, so the Access application was rewritten in VB 4 using "data widgets" and an SQL server 6.x access to an Oracle database on the LAN. With the same one user and data requirements, the application appeared to be either near death or on an extremely large dose of NyQuil. The VB application was stripped of its SQL and its data accesses rewritten to use ESS/400 pointing at the AS/400 (model 320, 4-way) with some data access programs written in OPM RPG resident on the /400 to subset the data and the planning system ABSOLUTELY SCREAMED! To be fair, LAN applications at the time ran through a rather constrained gateway instead of the IP addressing used now. Still, and I don't pretend to know how LANs are architected beyond NOS and protocol, AS/400 connections were running through that same gateway. Why should the application run so much faster on the /400 from the same PC's that performed so poorly on the LAN? I don't pretend to know. I _DO_ know that, despite recent OS/400 performance enhancements, SQL still runs _MUCH_ slower on the /400 than it does on other platforms according to those that should know. I don't know that this is an "MS bashing" thread. It's just that AS/400 professionals are more likely to have dealt with Micro$oft products than any other. IBM offers support for MS products, and some number of people (of which Bill Gates does not seem to be aware) run some flavor of the MS operating system on their PC's. We tend to try to work with what we already have, rather than paying a huge site license for some other product. JMHO, Dean Asmussen Enterprise Systems Consulting, Inc. Fuquay-Varina, NC USA E-Mail: DAsmussen@aol.com "A closed mouth gathers no feet." -- Anonymous +--- | This is the Midrange System Mailing List! | To submit a new message, send your mail to MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com. | To subscribe to this list send email to MIDRANGE-L-SUB@midrange.com. | To unsubscribe from this list send email to MIDRANGE-L-UNSUB@midrange.com. | Questions should be directed to the list owner/operator: david@midrange.com +---
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