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by hp50g
4817 days ago
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Its not a drop in replacement. You have to write code/configuration (but not much). Its definitely suitable for your use case - we use it for the same thing. Feature set is comparable. We tend to avoid specific platform features as they are a migration risk. Ha - our SQL license fee is around £60k a machine one off per major drop. We're not dropping that again for 2012. No way. Not when we have 8 machines :) |
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We are slowly digging ourselves out the hole with dependency injection in our code from a Entity point of view and want to go a similar route with our DB.
We are nowhere near yourselves but we have spent £18k on SQL licenses in the past 2 years. It's a lot of cash and I don't think we see the full benefit to be fair. Coupled with the abundance of other Microsoft licenses we pay out for, more than half our server costs are licenses.
I appreciate your comment, it's taken me a step in the right direction to sorting out DBs out.