|  | Posted by Neil on 10/04/07 05:59 
Well, the sys admin went ahead and moved SQL Server to the D drive, when I questioned him about it, even though I told him I'd get back to him about
 it. So now SQL's on the D drive with 204 GB. But you said that most of it
 will still remain on the C drive anyway. But maybe having the parts that are
 on the D drive there will help the system disk.
 
 Thanks.
 
 "Erland Sommarskog" <esquel@sommarskog.se> wrote in message
 news:Xns99BEF25D5AE6DYazorman@127.0.0.1...
 > Neil (nospam@nospam.net) writes:
 >> First, re. the 2 GB of RAM, considering that the db is not huge (two
 >> main tables have about 60,000 records each; a few other tables with a
 >> few thousand records; and then a bunch of smaller records); there are
 >> only about 50 users max; most of the activity is read-only, very little
 >> writing; and the hardware is brand new; do you think that would be
 >> enough, or should I push for more? I wouldn't count on the database
 >> being well-tuned.
 >
 > More memory is not going to hurt, but the database size you indicate
 > certainly does not scare me.
 >
 >> Second, re. the size of the disks, when you said "make sure there is at
 >> least 50 GB," wasn't sure if you meant 50 GB total, or 50 GB free space
 >> after SQL Server is installed. Here are the specs for the disks:
 >
 > I meant 50 GB in total. You are not going to fill up 36 GB on the spot,
 > but the strategy of Microsoft definitely is to bury a lot of stuff under
 > C:\Windows.
 >
 >
 > --
 > Erland Sommarskog, SQL Server MVP, esquel@sommarskog.se
 >
 > Books Online for SQL Server 2005 at
 > http://www.microsoft.com/technet/prodtechnol/sql/2005/downloads/books.mspx
 > Books Online for SQL Server 2000 at
 > http://www.microsoft.com/sql/prodinfo/previousversions/books.mspx
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