>> You want the crash safety and data integrity that comes with InnoDB.  Even
>> more so as your dataset grows.  It's performance is far better than myisam
>> tables for most OLTP users, and as your number of concurrent readers and
>> writers grows, the improvement in performance from using innodb over
>> myisam becomes more pronounced.
>
> His scenario is "perhaps updated once a year", though, so crash recovery and
> multiple writer performance is not important.

And the concurrent reader and writer number is set at one, unless I
undergo mitosis or something.

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