I think you missed my point.  this is a separate product you are creating
that will pull data from VFP and only store it online.  You can then build
up a new style of reporting outside of VFP.  Once they approve of it you
can delete the data older than 4 years or 7 years from the VFP
environment.  The Data Scientist role may suit you very well.

Check out this:
https://www.zs.com/services/technology/technology-services/big-data-and-data-scientist-services.aspx


On Fri, Dec 29, 2017 at 10:34 AM, <
[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi Steve,
>
> Again, it's not an issue with non-VFP backends like MySQL.  This was about
> the VFP-backend folks.  If I were to redesign an app, I would use MariaDB
> as the backend if I could.
>
> HNY!
> --Mike
>
>
>
> On 2017-12-29 11:26, Stephen Russell wrote:
>
>> Why not create a Data Warehouse for that data and archive it that way.
>> You
>> can put that into mySQL and remove it from .dbfs at the same time.
>>
>> Create your Fact and Dimension tables to contain the true data needed for
>> your DW over the long haul.  Then you can investigate a variety of tools
>> to
>> enable Data Analytics going forward.  This might give you some ideas on
>> that.
>> https://blog.capterra.com/free-and-open-source-data-visualization-tools/
>>
>>
>>
>> On Fri, Dec 29, 2017 at 9:47 AM, <
>> [email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> I've seen long-time softwares with VFP backends that had a ton of data
>>> (10+ years worth) and I had devised a method in one case recently to be
>>> able to "archive" old data by storing it in a subfolder intelligently (so
>>> it could be easily retrieved and/or reimported into the main data set).
>>> I
>>> haven't used a VFP backend since 2004 when Bob Lee introduced me to the
>>> MySQL world but nonetheless I thought I'd ask if devs here ever put
>>> anything like an "archiving" feature into their software, and how they do
>>> it.  In my case, instead of slinging 600MB of data across the network (in
>>> the case of one of my clients), my archiving showed a reduction of like
>>> 75%, so only 25% of that was being pulled across the LAN instead.  (They
>>> didn't need all the data from the beginning of the App's time...they just
>>> needed relevant/recent data.)
>>>
>>> I realize that with MySQL and other such RDBMSes this is a non-issue, but
>>> I wanted to ask the VFP-backend folks their approach to this for the sake
>>> of (hopefully) interesting discussion.  One final juicy thread before
>>> 2017
>>> is finished.  :-)
>>>
[excessive quoting removed by server]

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