SharePoint Online as a File Server
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@gjacobse said in SharePoint Online as a File Server:
Ugh - Sharepoint of QB? Forget it (IMO)
Go with a local NAS with remote backup to something like Backblaze or such...If you want to use QuickBooks in multiuser mode, you need a Windows box to host the company file so that you can run the QuickBooks database manager for each version of QuickBooks company files you're hosting. For that reason, a NAS won't do.
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@mike-davis said in SharePoint Online as a File Server:
@gjacobse said in SharePoint Online as a File Server:
Ugh - Sharepoint of QB? Forget it (IMO)
Go with a local NAS with remote backup to something like Backblaze or such...If you want to use QuickBooks in multiuser mode, you need a Windows box to host the company file so that you can run the QuickBooks database manager for each version of QuickBooks company files you're hosting. For that reason, a NAS won't do.
I thought they had a version that runs under some Linux distro last time I had to deal with that junk. Just the server portion of course.
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@travisdh1 said in SharePoint Online as a File Server:
I thought they had a version that runs under some Linux distro last time I had to deal with that junk. Just the server portion of course.
There is. When I think NAS box, I think commercial NAS box. I guess you could build a linux server and call it a NAS, but that's not what I was thinking of. If the commercial ones give you root access, I suppose you could install the Linux QuickBooks manager.
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More information on Quickbooks and Linux below (Not that I would encourage it)
https://community.intuit.com/articles/1552445-install-linux-database-server-manager -
@dbeato said in SharePoint Online as a File Server:
More information on Quickbooks and Linux below (Not that I would encourage it)
https://community.intuit.com/articles/1552445-install-linux-database-server-managerI'm right there with you. QuickBooks has problems enough of its own without involving two operating systems.
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@mike-davis said in SharePoint Online as a File Server:
@dbeato said in SharePoint Online as a File Server:
More information on Quickbooks and Linux below (Not that I would encourage it)
https://community.intuit.com/articles/1552445-install-linux-database-server-managerI'm right there with you. QuickBooks has problems enough of its own without involving two operating systems.
Two? Looks like the database only goes on one. No additional complexity. But solves some major licensing costs. Windows Server + CALs just for QB is pretty expensive.