| By Srinivasan Sundara Rajan | Article Rating: |
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| May 11, 2011 10:00 AM EDT | Reads: |
709 |
Microsoft Office Access is one of the most popular thick client / client server application development tool that is prevalent in the enterprises today. Its simplicity to use, fitment for quick departmental applications and ability to be home grown by the business users without dependency on IT and still a poor man's adhoc reporting tool, all makes MS Access a permanent place in most enterprises.
The latest incarnation of this application development and reporting tool has the following benefits:
- Build a relational database for small applications much faster using wizards
- User interface forms and reports using a common look and feel of Microsoft Office
- Automation features to avoid manual coding
- Ability to act as Information Integration Engine which can connect disparate data sources
Mostly Microsoft Access is used as a desktop thick client application and with increased usage of the Cloud Platform it would be helpful to analyze the options for Microsoft Office in Cloud.
Microsoft Access In Office 365
From older version of Microsoft Access we can move the data to Microsoft Access 2010, and then publishing the database to Access Services on Office 365, you can make your data accessible to all of your colleagues wherever they are. Perhaps more importantly, your database will be better able to grow as your needs change.
We can use Access 2010 and Access Services, a new component of SharePoint, to build web database applications. Access 2010 and Access Services provide a platform for you to create databases that you can use on the Web. You design and publish a web database by using Access 2010 and SharePoint, and people who have SharePoint accounts use the web database in a web browser.
When you publish a web database, Access Services creates a SharePoint site that contains the database. All of the database objects and data move to SharePoint lists in that site.
SSMA to SQL Azure
Microsoft SQL Server Migration Assistant (SSMA) is a toolkit that dramatically cuts the effort, cost, and risk of migrating from Access to SQL Server 2005, SQL Server 2008, SQL Server 2008 R2 and SQL Azure. SSMA 2008 for Access also supports migrating to SQL Azure.
SSMA provides a Wizard-like interface that allows us to:
- Create a Migration Project in SSMA with SQL Azure as the destination
- Allows us to choose the target schema for migration
- Migrate the tables and data with the convert , Load and Migrate command
- Provides ability to verify the migration
This tool provides an out-of-the-box solution for migration of Microsoft Access databases to Cloud.
Microsoft Access As Thick Client Cloud Consumer
If the data resides in SQL Azure, then Microsoft Access can continue to be a thick client and connect to a Cloud database using the linked tables option.
With Microsoft Access 2010, You can create an external data connection to a Web Service. For example, you can create a Web Service data connection to your enterprise Business Data Catalog and get business data. After you create a Web Service data connection, you can link to it as you would any other external data source. If the Web Service accepts parameters, you can change the parameters when you create a linked table by using the Web Service data connection.
The following are the general steps in making Microsoft Access consume Cloud Web Services as a thick client.
- Obtain a Web Service data connection file
- Install the web service data connection by using the connection file
- Create a linked table by using the installed web service data connection
Summary
Microsoft Office Access continues to be most productive end user reporting tool and in the past decade numerous enterprise class applications have been written using that tool.
We cannot discount the immense value Microsoft Access applications brought to end user analytics, adhoc reporting and complex client side calculations. The biggest draw back for the Microsoft Access applications have been hither to its storage where by the Jet engines which is the underlying database have historically known for space limitation.
While over the period the limitations have been reduced to a great extent, the above mentioned Cloud Migration options makes Microsoft Access continuously play a role in the enterprise end user productivity applications.
With the support for Microsoft Office mobile applications , having Microsoft Access as a thick client which can consume cloud data may be a worth while option for future productivity applications.
Published May 11, 2011 Reads 709
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Srinivasan Sundara Rajan works at Hewlett Packard as a Solution Architect. His primary focus is on enabling SOA through Legacy Modernization for Automobile Industries. He has worked as a consultant for Compuware, Verizon and other organizations in the earlier parts of career. All the views expressed are Srinivasan's independent analysis of industry and solutions and need not necessarily be of his current or past organizations. Srinivasan would like to thank every one who augmented his Architectural skills with Analytical ideas.
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