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

Charlotte Foust cfoust at infostatsystems.com
Thu Mar 19 17:16:09 CDT 2009


It's more than possible.  Access has always been pitched to power users, from 1.0, but people fell in love with it and found it so much nicer to use and work with than dBase or Paradox, that they switched over and started developing in Access.  Remember PCs were still somewhat infantile then and I don't think even Microsoft ever expected Access to grow into the development tool it became.  I think that was in the QBasic days, but my memory is fuzzy on that item. 

Charlotte Foust 

-----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 2:43 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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