UNless you have a really really large workplace why dont you just make a local IP port on the computers having the problem and print from there. I have no print problems doing this.
Just do a registry insert. Since I dont have a win9x machine around I dont know where odbc info is stored in win9x. But it is probably under hk local machine, microsoft, odbc connections or something. You then just do an export and then you can push the reg export with a batch file or something.
I dont understand why you would want to install the printer 3 times.
On the printer you can set the page type and then in the document you can set my paper type or by tray depending on which drivers you have installed.
If you are using NT forms I have only seen them cause problems.
That worked! Thanks so much. The only thing is that it is 1 hour off.( a value is reported as 11:38 where it should be 12:38 Which numbers should I edit to change this?
That worked. I was then getting this:
Server: Msg 170, Level 15, State 1, Line 11
Line 11: Incorrect syntax near ':'.
Which is this line:
dateadd(second,a.dateTimeOrigination-18000,'19700101 00:00:00') between :StartDate and :EndDate
So I took out the : next the startdate and enddate.
That...
I entered this (what rathna01 did) into query analyzer and it didnt work:
I get this error:
Server: Msg 156, Level 15, State 1, Line 8
Incorrect syntax near the keyword 'FROM'.
I am directly querying against sql 7, could that be it?
I am running sql 2000 where I would be storing any backend stuff, but the tables are in sql 7 on the call manager server. Does this qualify as using sql 2000 as far as a user defined function and module go?
It doesnt error out when I try to save it but when I change to datasheet view it says #error in the column
Matt, you are correct in that I am looking to have this done to a column of results. I want a qeury to be able to pull up call details from a user's extension or calls incomming in for...
Okay, so i did some fiddling and I still need some help.
I have changed my sql query to this:
SELECT dbo_CallDetailRecord.callingPartyNumber AS Caller, dbo_CallDetailRecord.finalCalledPartyNumber AS Called, dbo_CallDetailRecord.duration AS Duration...
My bad. The regular search function didnt turn up anything, but when I went to advanced after I posted I found some posts. I will try those before I post back :-)
Cisco Call Manager logs call data to sql and stores the dates in the format "seconds since midnight jan 1 1970.
My question is, how would I go about converting this to readable format either using a stored precedure or an sql query in access. I was able to sort of do something in access...
12.209.193.26 port 457
upload/upload
If either of the two people that have the 24 meg file could upload the file to me I will serve it. That login also allows download access.
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