Matt,

I have the same problem with MM's resources.  I'm always having to wade
through stuff to find the plain old technical articles - while tutorials
abound.

-mk

-----Original Message-----
From: Matt Robertson [mailto:matt@;mysecretbase.com]
Sent: Wednesday, November 06, 2002 10:29 AM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: RE: Downside to disabling "Maintain Database Connections


As I understand it, disabling that setting is the recommended best
practice for Access.  Keeps things from crashing outright, so in this
narrow circumstance there is no downside.  An article on this was in the
KB somewhere.  It was entitled along the lines of ''using access in
production environments''.  I couldn't find it by searching for
"access".

Whatever happened to the plain ol' KB?  Did it get absorbed into
something?  I couldn't even find the thing on the MM site.

--Matt Robertson--
MSB Designs, Inc.
http://mysecretbase.com



-----Original Message-----
From: Paul Sinclair [mailto:lists@;mail1.kingcrest.com]
Sent: Wednesday, November 06, 2002 7:43 AM
To: CF-Talk
Subject: Downside to disabling "Maintain Database Connections


I posted a note yesterday re several sites running veeerrrrrrrry slow on
a
server. I have a couple sites that are MS Access databases. I am in the
process of moving these to SQL but in the interim I need to keep the
sites
up. I found that by disabling the "Maintain Database Connections"
setting in
the ODBC configuration for these Access databases that it seems to take
care
of the problem for the most part. I am just wondering what the downside
is
to disabling that setting?

Thanks for advice.

Paul Sinclair



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