Discussion:
Convert/migrate Access 2000/2003 to Access 2007
(too old to reply)
Henry Smith
2008-11-16 17:21:01 UTC
Permalink
I have a Access DB (front end/back end) originally developed in AC 2000 and
updated and further developed in AC 2003 on a machine that is running XP.
Attempts to install and run this DB on a Vista machine with AC 2007 has
failed.
What do I have to do to migrate my DB to the new 2007 environment. Any help
with processes and procedures, references, web sites, tutorials will be
greatly appreciated.
--
Henry Smith
Pete D.
2008-11-16 22:11:12 UTC
Permalink
Start here, most of it is covered

http://allenbrowne.com/tips.html

View upgrading. I have had much more problems with Vista than Access in the
conversion but after doing a few machines and slamming my head against the
wall, with some reading most of the problems have gone away. To be
completely honest, I work in a very security minded network environment and
that has proven to be most of the problem. As far as Access 2007 goes, it
has about the same amount of problems as every upgrade. The interface, it is
intuitive but...what a learning curve. Like jumping from DOS to WinXP. I
do think MS slammed the door on some previous versions but in most cases
they did leave the ability to gracefully move to new tech as long as you
keep old format db. I also spend much more time helping desktop users find
that thing they used to use. To date nothing has failed but a few were
crippled for a couple days while replacing filesearch utilities or fixing
trusts/signatures. Might also be that the guru folks didn't read the
migration strategy as well as they should of.
Post by Henry Smith
I have a Access DB (front end/back end) originally developed in AC 2000 and
updated and further developed in AC 2003 on a machine that is running XP.
Attempts to install and run this DB on a Vista machine with AC 2007 has
failed.
What do I have to do to migrate my DB to the new 2007 environment. Any help
with processes and procedures, references, web sites, tutorials will be
greatly appreciated.
--
Henry Smith
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