[AccessD] FMS Article on the new features in Access 2007

Hewson, Jim JHewson at nciinc.com
Thu Mar 19 16:54:37 CDT 2009


What I am finding that some of our customers do not want any .net development or any other development that involves any type of programming language.  Some of their IT departments considered it a new developed software and it could take several months or longer to get approval to begin the project and/or deploy it.  If the development is done in Access using the tools that came with Access then the IT department considers it COTS and no approval is necessary.

Jim


-----Original Message-----
From: accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com [mailto:accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com] On Behalf Of rusty.hammond at cpiqpc.com
Sent: Thursday, March 19, 2009 4:43 PM
To: accessd at databaseadvisors.com
Subject: Re: [AccessD] FMS Article on the new features in Access 2007

I would expand that to the office suite, not just Access.  Is it possible
Access was never intended to be the development tool it became, but just a
power user application.  Now they are trying to reel it back in and move us
to .net?

-----Original Message-----
From: accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com
[mailto:accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com] On Behalf Of David McAfee
Sent: Thursday, March 19, 2009 4:19 PM
To: Access Developers discussion and problem solving
Subject: Re: [AccessD] FMS Article on the new features in Access 2007

I'll Just wait for the next version.

It used to be every other version of Access was not that great. I think
something got out of Sync.

1 -Never used it
2 - Good
95 - Bleh, hurl, <dry heave noise>
97 - My favorite
2000 - I liked it, but I think it wasnt well liked
2002 (Office XP) I never really used it
2003 - Like it
2007 - more dry heaving noises

On Thu, Mar 19, 2009 at 2:09 PM, Max Wanadoo <max.wanadoo at gmail.com> wrote:
> With the single exception of the Datasheet Totals, there is nothing 
> fundamental,y improved for me as a developer.   The quote "..get  used 
> to it.." made me spit.  I can get used to anything, but why have all 
> these new ways of doing what is essentially the same.  Lots of "stuff" 
> is worse - David points them out below.
> For me, I abhor the 2007.  No "fundamental" improvements - with this 
> "update", beauty is not even skin deep.
>
> Max
>
>
> On 3/19/09, David McAfee <davidmcafee at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> I agree with him on these A2007 problems:
>>
>> Not being able to see a list of object sorted by modified date the 
>> way you'd expect in Windows Explorer.
>>
>> Losing Alt+D as a way to put the current object in design mode
>>
>> Losing the toolbar item to automatically jump to a form or report's 
>> module code
>>
>> Missing right mouse click items like import/export
>>
>> As for the Ribbon, I don't like the "Once you get used to it, its not 
>> that bad" that I hear quite often.
>> I don't feel so many command/tol bar buttons need to be seen. As a 
>> programer, I feel I need to know what the user needs to have 
>> available to them, If they do need something that can navigate view 
>> the menus (oops, they removed them!).
>>
>> "Overcoming Resistance to Change
>>
>> For years, the Access community complained that Microsoft was 
>> abandoning Access, that they didn't invest enough in it, that the Jet 
>> Engine and DAO was dead, etc. Well, the Microsoft Access development 
>> team for Access 2007 was the largest ever and Microsoft made a huge 
>> investment that added considerable new features to Access."
>>
>> I never really requested change. I hoped that they wouldn't abandon 
>> Access, like was always rumored.
>>
>> There are a few new cool features, but they never fixed some old bugs 
>> that still go back to early versions of Access.
>>
>> They still haven't made a list box with .fontcolor or 
>> .selectedrowBackColor property.
>>
>> The datasheet totals are cool, but I should provide that for my users 
>> in their form. Remember, users shouldnt be accessing the 
>> tables/queries directly.
>>
>> "In Access 2007, a different approach is necessary for finding your 
>> object. Rather than visually finding it, enter some letters of the 
>> object name in the Search Bar, and the list of objects gets filtered 
>> to just those names. This makes it very easy to find objects by name
>> -- especially text within an object name -- that wasn't possible 
>> before. Once you are used to this, it's very difficult to go back."
>>
>> Nah, give me my detail view. The ability to sort by Name and or date 
>> is more important to me. My naming conventions is another way for me 
>> to quickly find what I need.
>>
>> The Date picker is nice, but is there a way to turn it off? THey may 
>> be times where you don't want it to be displayed, or use your own 
>> instead.
>>
>> Just my worthless 2 cents,
>> David
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On Thu, Mar 19, 2009 at 1:04 PM, <rusty.hammond at cpiqpc.com> wrote:
>> >
>> > I just thought I'd throw this out there and see everyone thinks.
>> >
>> > http://www.fmsinc.com/MicrosoftAccess/2007/Top-Features.html
>> > <http://www.fmsinc.com/MicrosoftAccess/2007/Top-Features.html>
>> >
>> > It does sound like there are some nice new features.  Whether they
>> outweigh
>> > the drawbacks...
>> >
>> >
>> > Rusty Hammond
>> >
>> >
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