Tek-Tips is the largest IT community on the Internet today!

Members share and learn making Tek-Tips Forums the best source of peer-reviewed technical information on the Internet!

  • Congratulations Chris Miller on being selected by the Tek-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

How to open Access without having MS Access installed

Status
Not open for further replies.

chep123

IS-IT--Management
Feb 28, 2006
8
AU
Hi

I need to distribute some access programs files to my users, but they don't have it installed on their machine. Due to licensing problem, i can't install a copy on their machine. How can i distribute the program to them? Any way? How bout MDE? Hope can help. Thanks.

 
Hi ArkM,

Beside this, is there any other way to do this? I don't have the developer version and i dont think the company will ever purchase it. Thanks.
 
Do you have Office 2000 Small Business Edition installed on the user machines? If disk 2 is installed it has an access runtime that will allow your programs to run. I don't know about other versions.

willybgw
 
You can search these fora for discussions of Access Runtimes. The ability to create a runtime version has evolved over the Access Versions. In Access 97 you needed the Developer Edition. Now, in Access 2003 you need the Developer Extensions and I believe Visual Studio. Again, check the discussions here under 'Advanced Search'.
 
If your company isn't willing to pay for a single developer copy of Access, build a terrible version of the application in Excel, or better: Word. You get what you (fail to) pay for.
 
oh, it will just ruin my reputation. However i manage to solve this issue. Many thanks to all of you. cheers...
 
I guess you're already in trouble for this project. The point is that you should expect more support. If they don't spend the $800 on the tool, they'll end up paying you $800 more, one hour at a time, as you try to work around the constraint.

Anyway, the next time someone asks for someone, just tell them "that's not possible with the tools I have".
 

This might seem odd, but how does one write from Excel to SQL? I have not seen that, and it might help in an goofy little app we would like to retire.
Where could I look? Perhaps the proper serach term here?

This is why Artemis slew Orion ERP
 
Look at ADODB

Hope This Helps, PH.
Want to get great answers to your Tek-Tips questions? Have a look at FAQ219-2884 or FAQ181-2886
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor

Back
Top