|  | Posted by John Bell on 09/09/05 10:57 
Hi Oscar
 A couple of questions that may help Phil!
 
 "Oscar Santiesteban Jr." <oscarsantiesteban@worldnet.att.net> wrote in
 message news:dN5Ue.212144$5N3.93311@bgtnsc05-news.ops.worldnet.att.net...
 > Phil,
 >
 > We have been using a Billing system for the City's Water, Sewer, Garbage,
 > and Storm Water for the past 6 years.  We started using this system when
 > Great Plains was still their own company, and not part of Microsoft.  The
 > system has never had any problems.  I run a DBCC on the database, and
 > reindex every weekend.  I do full backups every night and transaction log
 > backups every hour.
 
 Was this set up by the consultancy or by you?
 What training was included in the install?
 
 > We have never had a need to call Great Plains, we
 > mainly called our vendor with problems in the software.
 
 I would assume this is things recoverying from incorrect configuration or
 programming problems rather than database (engine) issues per-se?
 
 > You will notice
 > however that the Great Plains developers were smoking some bad weed when
 > they developed this system.
 
 It was probably tax deductable?
 
 > Any system that names their tables with
 > "zx00012234" for example are crazy.  The people of Remedy (formerly of
 > Peregrine) also suffer from halucinations and also use this crazy method.
 
 Wierd table names in Accounting software is not uncommon!!
 
 John
 >
 > Just as an FYI, the Great Plains system is developed in a language called
 > "DEXTERITY".  There is some sort of VBA add-in which will allow you to
 > develop forms in Visual Basic.
 >
 >
 > "TheScullster" <phil@dropthespam.com> wrote in message
 > news:A8mdnRQUcufeMoDeSa8jmw@karoo.co.uk...
 >> Hi all
 >>
 >> Sorry if this is such a mega dumb question for this group, but what
 > exactly
 >> is involved in maintaining/supporting a SQL database?
 >>
 >> My company is looking at accounting software "Great Plains" which they
 >> intend to run on SQL server.
 >> Having only had experience of a split Access database, this is something
 > of
 >> a quantum leap for me!
 >> The only maintenance I do on the Access version is a scheduled nightly
 >> compact/repair on the back end and have the front ends set to compact on
 >> close.
 >>
 >> So what is involved with the SQL database?
 >> Is it straightforward, or should I be talking the company into paying for
 >> yet more "maintenance/support" for someone to remote in weekly and
 >> perform
 > a
 >> similar  function?
 >>
 >> Any help appreciated.
 >>
 >> Phil
 >>
 >>
 >
 >
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