Not the fastest platform for doing HUGE csv imports into a table, but, I got it working after digging out my old copy of FMP 8.5 and 5.0 [i do NOT recommend running FMP 8 or 9 on a G3 under 400MHz and less than 512MB of RAM]
One thing that was weird, when I loaded FMP 8.5 onto my XP VM, I was dealing with a corrupted PEM for root and server. I had to copy the PEM files over from my G3 Pismo (after a fresh install on Tiger) to get it to "see" the network instances.
When last I used FMP 8 (or 9 for that matter) was when we had a G4 mac mini as our "team" server running FM Server 9 on Tiger. We switched over to a FM Server "Advanced" on a Mac Pro running Leopard on a dual-G5 and 4GB of RAM. It was like nigh-n-day difference in performance and web apps we ran seemed to just scream along. When we got the 8-core Mac Pro with 8GB into production with FM Server 9 (or 10?), and big-fast 7200 RPM drives in a RAID-10 setup, we had more people using FM apps than Oracle Apps.
IT had a snit-fit because they had to setup user accounts on both systems and didn't like having a pair of "towers" taking up precious space in their APC racks. The G5 for dev and the 2006 Pro for Production.
A bit of fond memories from those days...
One thing that was weird, when I loaded FMP 8.5 onto my XP VM, I was dealing with a corrupted PEM for root and server. I had to copy the PEM files over from my G3 Pismo (after a fresh install on Tiger) to get it to "see" the network instances.
When last I used FMP 8 (or 9 for that matter) was when we had a G4 mac mini as our "team" server running FM Server 9 on Tiger. We switched over to a FM Server "Advanced" on a Mac Pro running Leopard on a dual-G5 and 4GB of RAM. It was like nigh-n-day difference in performance and web apps we ran seemed to just scream along. When we got the 8-core Mac Pro with 8GB into production with FM Server 9 (or 10?), and big-fast 7200 RPM drives in a RAID-10 setup, we had more people using FM apps than Oracle Apps.
IT had a snit-fit because they had to setup user accounts on both systems and didn't like having a pair of "towers" taking up precious space in their APC racks. The G5 for dev and the 2006 Pro for Production.
A bit of fond memories from those days...

