Dennis, I agree with you about using the DB Connectivity Toolkit - though I've only worked with a beta copy, it looks like a worthwhile purchase for the original poster. I've extensively used the SQL toolkit (DB Tools' predecessor). I would say the OP must get a good book on relational DB design before starting - toolkits are no substitute for good table design. I'm surprised at your comment, though, about Access not scaling well - I've had a built LV app using the SQL toolkit/ODBC/Access '97 running on four test stations for the past eight months, where the .mdb file is on a network share, and each station INSERTs a test record approx every 40 seconds, plus operator actions cause SELECTs, INSERTS, etc. at random times, plus people (like me) do Access que
ries from desktops, and the stations run solid as a rock. Two stns running under W95, two running W2K, all on LAN. Wouldn't want to try 50 stns, though, but 4 to 8 should be a breeze.
To OP: Get Rebecca Riordan's 'Designing Relational Databases' (sorry, it's @ work, that may not be precise title) from Microsoft Press, esp. if you're considering Access or SQL Server. **Learn what good RDB design is before collecting data ** - I can't stress that enough. Best of luck!
David Boyd
Sr. Test Engineer
Abbott Labs
(lapsed) Certified LabVIEW Developer