Karen -

        This sounds like a hardware problem.  I've
seen it where there were bad NIC's and also where 
there were network wiring problems.

Bernie



At 03:42 PM 4/21/2005 EDT, you wrote:
>
>I'm sitting here helping out another consultant who has 
>significant database corruption at several clients.  I have
>practically no corruption at any of my clients.  One common
>thread he thought of -- these clients have XP or 2000 
>workstations connecting to a database on a Windows 98
>database server.  Anyone have this configuration?
>
>BTW the reason it's on Win98, is that when he had the
>database on W2000 server he said that one user logging in
>had no problems.  As soon as one other person connected
>the performance degraded significantly.  Putting the database
>on Win98 server put the performance back.  So I guess another
>question would be if there was a fix for that.....
>
>thank!
>
>Karen
>
><HTML><FONT FACE=arial,helvetica><FONT  SIZE=2 PTSIZE=10>
><BR>I'm sitting here helping out another consultant who has 
><BR>significant database corruption at several clients. &nbsp;I have
><BR>practically no corruption at any of my clients. &nbsp;One common
><BR>thread he thought of -- these clients have XP or 2000 
><BR>workstations connecting to a database on a Windows 98
><BR>database server. &nbsp;Anyone have this configuration?
><BR>
><BR>BTW the reason it's on Win98, is that when he had the
><BR>database on W2000 server he said that one user logging in
><BR>had no problems. &nbsp;As soon as one other person connected
><BR>the performance degraded significantly. &nbsp;Putting the database
><BR>on Win98 server put the performance back. &nbsp;So I guess another
><BR>question would be if there was a fix for that.....
><BR>
><BR>thank!
><BR>
><BR>Karen
><BR></FONT></HTML>
>

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