Mark A Matte
markamatte at hotmail.com
Thu Mar 22 09:54:33 CDT 2007
I know...and it turns out I might be wrong, I assumed 1 OBJID per second, hence the 86400...but there might be more. In all of my searching online...I found a resume of a guy that helped write the program. He actually just called me back. He says that the OBJID is based on UNIX time(1970 something)...and he thinks(from what he remembers...)there can be 4 OBJIDs for each second. Does this give anyone any ideas? Thanks, Mark A. Matte >From: "Gustav Brock" <Gustav at cactus.dk> >Reply-To: Access Developers discussion and problem >solving<accessd at databaseadvisors.com> >To: <accessd at databaseadvisors.com> >Subject: Re: [AccessD] OT(kinda): Crack Code >Date: Thu, 22 Mar 2007 15:24:54 +0100 > >Hi Mark > >86400 is the count of seconds for one day. > >/gustav > > >>> markamatte at hotmail.com 22-03-2007 15:16 >>> >The date is stored in the table...but not the time. If you want a >date/time...I have to plug the OBJID into the FE and it converts it for me. >I can extract the date and the OBJID...but you can have up to 86400 >different OBJIDs for 1 date. I can try to get about 100 if you like. > >Mark > >-- >AccessD mailing list >AccessD at databaseadvisors.com >http://databaseadvisors.com/mailman/listinfo/accessd >Website: http://www.databaseadvisors.com _________________________________________________________________ Watch free concerts with Pink, Rod Stewart, Oasis and more. Visit MSN Presents today. http://music.msn.com/presents?icid=ncmsnpresentstagline&ocid=T002MSN03A07001