Tay
likes garlic
- Local time
- Today, 17:46
- Joined
- May 24, 2002
- Messages
- 269
I've an unsplit db on a network which is being used by several people. When the db went live, I did split it, however, diabolically slow network speeds meant that after 5 minutes, there was no guarantee that a form would load... More often than not, Access crashed. So, I reverted to an unsplit db, knowing the day would come when I'd have to reconsider...
Today, I entered some data into a form, while a colleague did the same on his machine. I (stupidly?) thought that this would not be a problem; both of our new records would save. When my colleague entered his records, he sent an email notification, via this database, to a manager. The manager received the email and I obtained the reference numbers for these records, which populate the email title. However, when I later looked at the db, I saw that those reference numbers had actually been assigned to the records that I saved, not those of my colleague.
I don't quite understand how this happened. I presume that somehow my records overwrote those of my colleague, but for it to happen twice seems like more than coincidence. Has something else caused this to occur?
Whatever the cause, presumably the only way to avoid this is to split the db? And if so, how do I get users to use the new front end? As our IS department will not maintain the database (no budget, so they want no involvement), I don't see how I'll be able to install it on each user's machine. I'd hoped that I could let them use one front end, which will reside in a shared network drive. Does anyone know of any inherent problems with this approach?
Today, I entered some data into a form, while a colleague did the same on his machine. I (stupidly?) thought that this would not be a problem; both of our new records would save. When my colleague entered his records, he sent an email notification, via this database, to a manager. The manager received the email and I obtained the reference numbers for these records, which populate the email title. However, when I later looked at the db, I saw that those reference numbers had actually been assigned to the records that I saved, not those of my colleague.
I don't quite understand how this happened. I presume that somehow my records overwrote those of my colleague, but for it to happen twice seems like more than coincidence. Has something else caused this to occur?
Whatever the cause, presumably the only way to avoid this is to split the db? And if so, how do I get users to use the new front end? As our IS department will not maintain the database (no budget, so they want no involvement), I don't see how I'll be able to install it on each user's machine. I'd hoped that I could let them use one front end, which will reside in a shared network drive. Does anyone know of any inherent problems with this approach?