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Date: | Thu, 15 Dec 2022 16:59:04 -0500 |
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Think on this:
https://sites.google.com/view/connections-usa-proceedings
THen click on the link that says: Click here to access the Connections
US Conference Proceedings
Then at the bottom go to the 1999 tab.
Then click on the 9th row about Commercial Wargames Database by Matt
McCaffrey.
The middle file in the zip is an old Excel spreadsheet.
My guess this would be accessed by a few academics and the relative few
of the Modeling and Simulation (DoD, MoD) types.
*
*
<https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1HS2ofBPiXyDdOPm5az0O7bv3y4fVhImzrD1RVv8YL4w/edit?usp=sharing>**
<https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1HS2ofBPiXyDdOPm5az0O7bv3y4fVhImzrD1RVv8YL4w/edit?usp=sharing>
On 12/15/22 16:10, James B. Byrne wrote:
>> Date: Wed, 14 Dec 2022 12:46:43 -0500
>> From: Tracy Johnson<[log in to unmask]>
>> Subject: Proper Database 2023?
>>
>> After 20 years or so things change.
>>
>> Rhetorical question: What database and browser server would you use
>> now-a-days if you were to make a read only database served up by a web page?
> The answer to that depends upon a lot of details. To begin with: How many
> concurrent users are going to be hitting the HTTP server? Likewise, how many
> transactions does the DBMS need to handle? How much maintenance are you
> willing to assume? How comfortable are you with setting up a web server? How
> is the DBMS going to be wired to the web server? PHP? Python? Java? Perl? What
> platform do you plan to use?
>
> If the data is essentially static and the number of concurrent users are very
> low then you can get by with SQLite behind either an Apache or NGINX. If
> traffic will be very modest and server maintenance is not your thing then
> Lighttpd is a good choice.
>
> The traditional LAMP stack is Linux with Apache, MySQL, and PHP. MySQL has a
> descendant named MariaDB, which is a fork of MySQL due to philosophical
> differences between the original MySQL Open Source team and the purchaser of
> MySQL, Oracle Corp.
>
> Also you may wish to take a look at MongoDB as an alternative to separate DB
> and programming languages as your back-end. But only if available RAM is
> plentiful.
>
> Regards,
>
--
Tracy Johnson
BT
NNNN
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