Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 15 total)
Microsoft took an intuitive, easy-to-use tool (DTS), and turned into a needlessly complicated, buggy disaster called SSIS. I believe Microsoft has completely lost touch with who their customers really...
January 5, 2009 at 11:07 am
This is my biggest problem with 2005. They took an extremely intuitive product (DTS), and Microsoftized it. By that I mean they added a boatload of features (most of which...
May 7, 2007 at 12:13 pm
I think Microsoft really dropped the ball with SSIS. They took an easy-to-use and very intuitive product, and turned it into a needlessly complex nightmare. Primarily because of the SSIS...
March 31, 2006 at 10:21 am
SQL 2000 is meeting our business needs, and after taking a look at SQL 2005, I see a ton of work in re-engineering DTS packages into SSIS (it would seem...
December 19, 2005 at 11:25 am
I finally threw in the towel, and added an output parameter with the return code, because I already have code that works to get a value from an output parameter.
One...
June 15, 2005 at 10:03 am
Does anyone have an example that is vbscript, not pure vb? All the examples I find are vb, and nothing I'm trying is working.
June 14, 2005 at 3:35 pm
Well, in this particular case, I'm talking about a quasi-data warehouse that gets refreshed each week using bulk loading processes. During the week, it just gets queried, with no updates...
January 5, 2005 at 4:04 pm
I have had enough strange problems importing from Excel, that I no longer do it. I save the Excel sheet out as a tab-delimited text file, and import from that.
November 2, 2004 at 10:47 am
Thanks! How does this compare to using the Oracle Instant Client?
August 13, 2004 at 10:50 am
I use "Professional SQL Server 2000 DTS", but mostly as a reference rather than a manual. It's a decent book.
August 13, 2004 at 10:36 am
It seems putting all of these steps in a DTS package, and then scheduling it is the way to go. Perhaps the only problem might be if the ERP application...
August 12, 2004 at 1:08 pm
Well, I think my response to this would be similar to another response I just posted.
I don't think you could do this all in one step. Nor would you want...
August 12, 2004 at 12:20 pm
Well, I don't see a way to do this in one easy step. So, I would load the AS400 data into a staging table.
From the staging table, you may need...
August 12, 2004 at 12:08 pm
I'd like to suggest that in your Plan A, you not only copy the backup files to a test server, but you take the additional step of restoring them on...
July 29, 2004 at 12:17 pm
If these strategies don't work, you could export the data to another table, drop the table, re-create it with the column defined the way you want it, then copy the...
June 10, 2004 at 2:48 pm
Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 15 total)
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