[AccessD] Running Access 2002 runtime on an Windows XP machine

Spam JohnSkolits at corporatedatadesign.com
Thu Dec 9 16:40:31 CST 2004


There is no access security and the ldb file will be created in the same
folder as the app. And they should have all rights to that folder. So I'm
not sure who or what is preventing the ability to add or delete data. Note
that even "super user" doesn't work.

-----Original Message-----
From: accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com
[mailto:accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com] On Behalf Of Charlotte Foust
Sent: Thursday, December 09, 2004 4:48 PM
To: Access Developers discussion and problem solving
Subject: RE: [AccessD] Running Access 2002 runtime on an Windows XP machine 


Our clients run like this all the time.  We assume that our users are NOT
the OS administrators.  Are you using Access security?  In order to delete
records, they have to be able to log in and create the LDB file if it
doesn't already exist.  If they have no permissions to create/write/delete
that file, they won't be able to delete any records.

Charlotte Foust


-----Original Message-----
From: Spam [mailto:JohnSkolits at corporatedatadesign.com] 
Sent: Thursday, December 09, 2004 1:15 PM
To: 'Access Developers discussion and problem solving'
Subject: [AccessD] Running Access 2002 runtime on an Windows XP machine 


Sorry if this was posted twice.

 

Anyone have a problem running a 'runtime' version of Access on a machine in
which the user is not the "OS "administrator?  I have tried "super user" but
the user can't delete any records. Says no permissions.

This is not the user logging into Access that seems to be the issue. It
seems to be the user logging onto the PCs operating system when they start
the PC. A user with operating system administrative rights has no problem. 

Also, if I log on to the OS as the user with limited rights and run the app
as an administrator (can do that by right-clicking on the apps, icon and
selecting :"Run As") it the app runs with no problems..

Any ideas? Any way of launching an app and specifying the administrator as
the user. Maybe a command line argument?

Thanks,

John

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