Umm, that is the topic name. Simply following what the OP wrote.
Which business logic from Excel imported Access applications? Are we negating this types of Apps out there?
Converting, migrating, moving are just semantics from the users point of view. So lets discuss what is the accepted term first and stick to that.
For example, "moving" Access DB to MSSQL. Is it moving or converting or migrating or something else? Are we converting Excel table to Access or migrating?
I'm confused what exactly is expected from me? People mentioned Airtable, why did they mentioned it? But I can't mention something else? Why? Why am I viewed differently? Or you shutting me down? Fine.
Good luck and all the best. No need to reply, thanks. Canceling my profile.
Semantics? I think you do not know the meaning of the word "Semantics". Or as the movie line put it, "I don't think semantics means what you think it means."
The problem is, fundamentally, that relational database applications rely on the greatest possible degree of objectivity. When one starts throwing subjective interpretations of terms and values into the mix, things go sideways very quickly.
One of my favorite sayings is that ambiguity is crucial in humor, poetry and politics, but it is anathema is relational database applications.
In that sense, trying to obscure what your approach really does by dismissing it as merely a matter of "semantics", is inaccurate at best.
We don't develop "from a users point of view". We develop because we are developers. The fact that you attempt to dismiss that as an irrelevant detail says a lot about the method as well, unfortunately.
I'm a relative newcomer to this site myself, so I tread a bit more lightly than I might otherwise. However, I noticed your initial post here betrayed a bit of a confrontational attitude right out of the gate, and I wondered how that was going to fly, or not.
One final thought, although I've been in the Access development world for a long time, I try hard to remain humble about what I do and do not know. Humility goes a long way in avoiding confrontation.