eldorado99
Lifer
- Feb 16, 2004
- 36,324
- 3,163
- 126
Starting at 8000 entries and growing at a rate of 1000/year. Accordingly, roughly 1000/yr would go dead, but unless properly deleted, which they've never done before, they'll stick in there.
As for the size of an entry, they could a) use the reference number and look up from a different db and keep just the quantities in this one, or b) use the reference number and look up from an online db, or c) load all the details and data into this db. If a or b, a couple Kb per entry? If c, 10-20 Kb?
So "huge" is a relative term, but there is no limit to how far it will grow.
Create an image file on another HDD.
Restore this to your SSD.
Realign the partition using a free utility.
To further complicate it... the items come in various sizes, and people can purchase less than a full unit.
In one of my systems, we image and store roughly 500K documents per year, complete with tagged metadata. :awe:
Sounds like you need to come up with a labeling standard and encode that in the bar code.
That's, uh, colossal.
Our "servers" are a few Dell workstations sitting on a counter in an office. Our total personnel number about one hundred. Major difference of scale.
Even still, our DB is "only" 200 GB in size.One of my projects this year is to start splitting that up. SQL can handle larger DBs and so can Sharepoint, but they don't recommend going much above that.
Since we're due for a major upgrade (both from a Sharepoint perspective and a KnowledgeLake {imaging software} perspective), I'm thinking about just waiting for the upgrade and then just doing a straight cutover. The current DB will become an archival system and the new DB will store docs going forward.
A good plan.
Oh damn, tracking by location... D:
How are you supposed to know if JimBob the lab tech takes some chemical from one room to the next? Are you supposed to conduct physical inventories every month?
There was a Sharepoint thread a couple months ago where an agitated user "threatened" his Sharepoint admins with dumping 11,000 documents into a document library. I laughed at the guy and pointed out that I have a document library that is probably north of 1.5 million documents.
How are you supposed to know if JimBob the lab tech takes some chemical from one room to the next? Are you supposed to conduct physical inventories every month?
Use the right system in the first place?
http://limsource.com/home.html
Paragon used to be free for alignment.
Ah yes, LIMS. I've not seen or heard of that product in many years.
