Jim Dettman
jimdettman at verizon.net
Thu Feb 21 09:31:12 CST 2013
Some, but the majority do not. But it doesn't change the fact that Access has always been part of Office and never marketed as a developer tool by Microsoft. It's never been listed by them as being part of any development technology and it's never been referred to as a developer tool. Their focus has always been taking a complex task and making it easier for the end user. MVF's, attachment data type, PDF snap-in, etc are examples of those. For the most part, they've never really focused on what developers needed. If they had, we would not still be living with reference issues, would have more 3rd party controls available to us, more control of the screen and application object, a better installer, improvements in the JET engine, etc. Microsoft has continually taken what developers stretched Access to do, looked at that, and then simplified those tasks for the end user. And now more then ever, anything that can't be simplified is being stripped out (Replication, ADP's, and Workgroup Security). Since A2007, it has been more about the end user then ever before because now, things like VS, SQL Server, and Light Switch can occupy a space that Access once had a lock on. Jim. -----Original Message----- From: accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com [mailto:accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com] On Behalf Of John W Colby Sent: Thursday, February 21, 2013 08:51 AM To: Access Developers discussion and problem solving Subject: Re: [AccessD] Tony's comments LOL, and yet... what power user understands normalization? VBA? Object models? ADO vs DAO? etc ad nasium. John W. Colby? Reality is what refuses to go away when you do not believe in it On 2/21/2013 7:42 AM, Jim Dettman wrote: > You need to be fair here; Microsoft has never said Access is a developers > tool nor marketed it as such. > > Jim. > > -----Original Message----- > From: accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com > [mailto:accessd-bounces at databaseadvisors.com] On Behalf Of David McAfee > Sent: Wednesday, February 20, 2013 06:26 PM > To: Access Developers discussion and problem solving > Subject: Re: [AccessD] Tony's comments > > But Access was too good of a tool. MS has been wanting to kill it for years. <<snip>>