Have you ever tried to put away a pile of laundry that’s been growing for weeks? You know it needs to be done, yet you avoid it for as long as possible. Now imagine that pile started 30 years ago, contains data spread across dozens of systems, and has hundreds of people unknowingly relying on it every single day. That’s what it feels like to retire a legacy database.
Earlier this year I had the opportunity to help one of our clients retire an on-premises database older than I am. The 30-year-old database had been seen as outdated for at least 10 years, but it was still actively being used. Here are some of the things I heard when I started the project: