Barbara Ryan
BarbaraRyan at cox.net
Wed Oct 27 13:49:10 CDT 2004
That's good news (regarding Microsoft SQL) --- they currently are using Access 97, but are converting to XP in the near future, so looks like they'll have it. I don't think that they will have more than 10 users. Barb ----- Original Message ----- From: "Robert L. Stewart" <rl_stewart at highstream.net> To: <accessd at databaseadvisors.com> Cc: <martyconnelly at shaw.ca> Sent: Wednesday, October 27, 2004 2:20 PM Subject: [AccessD] Re: Access with a MySQL database > If they have Office 2000 or higher, they have SQL Server in the MSDE. > It is good for up to 10 concurrent users. > > My SQL does not support stored procedures, views, or referential > integrity. SQL Server, even the MSDE, does. > > Robert > > At 12:00 PM 10/27/2004 -0500, you wrote: > >Date: Wed, 27 Oct 2004 07:43:35 -0700 > >From: MartyConnelly <martyconnelly at shaw.ca> > >Subject: Re: [AccessD] Access with a MySQL database > >To: Access Developers discussion and problem solving > > <accessd at databaseadvisors.com> > >Message-ID: <417FB417.6010601 at shaw.ca> > >Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset=us-ascii > > > >Something I came across from an ASP perspective > >http://www.aspfree.com/c/a/Microsoft-Access/An-Access-Front-End-to-MySQL/ > > > >Barbara Ryan wrote: > > > > >Does anyone have any experience using an Access application as a > > front-end to a MySQL database back-end? My client is interested in > > converting the Access back-end to either SQL Server or MySQL. They > > currently do not own SQL Server but are using MySQL in their web application. > > > > > >Any thoughts (advantages, limitations, etc.)? > > > > > >Thanks, > > >Barb Ryan > > > > > > > > > -- > _______________________________________________ > AccessD mailing list > AccessD at databaseadvisors.com > http://databaseadvisors.com/mailman/listinfo/accessd > Website: http://www.databaseadvisors.com