IN THE SPOTLIGHT: MDE to MDB Conversion Service
(also supports: ACCDE to ACCDB, ADE to ADP, etc)
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Access Database Repair Service
An in-depth repair service for corrupt Microsoft Access files
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: vbWatchdog
VBA error handling just got easier...
" vbWatchdog is off the chart. It solves a long standing problem of how to consolidate error handling into one global location and avoid repetitious code within applications. "
- Joe Anderson,
Microsoft Access MVP
Meet Shady, the vbWatchdog mascot watching over your VBA code →
(courtesy of Crystal Long, Microsoft Access MVP)
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: vbMAPI
An Outlook / MAPI code library for VBA, .NET and C# projects
Get emails out to your customers reliably, and without hassle, every single time.
Use vbMAPI alongside Microsoft Outlook to add professional emailing capabilities to your projects.
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Code Protector
Standard compilation to MDE/ACCDE format is flawed and reversible.
To be direct:
| If you're interested in… | Search for this instead | |---------------------------|--------------------------| | GUI in 1989 | "Windows 2.1 1989 architecture" or "Windows/386" | | What people thought Windows would become | "Microsoft OS/2 1.2 1989" (the joint IBM-Microsoft project) | | A 1989 operating system | "Macintosh System 6.0.4" or "AmigaOS 1.3" | | The myth of "Windows 89" | "Hoax software versions Windows 89" (some abandonware fakes exist) | No peer-reviewed paper does, because it doesn't exist. However, for a footnote in a history paper, you could cite: Chen, R. (2012). The Old New Thing: Practical Development Throughout the Evolution of Windows . Addison-Wesley. (Discusses common version number myths, including "Windows 89.") Final answer: There are no good papers on "Windows 89" because it never existed. But there are excellent papers on Windows 2.1 (1988–89) and Windows 3.0 (1990) – let me know which one you'd like a full citation and summary for. windows 89