Martin Reid
mwp.reid at qub.ac.uk
Sun Jan 14 05:57:40 CST 2007
HI Gustav We are putting 30,000 users on Sharepoint over the next two years. Just a FYI but then we pay next to nothing for the actualy software unlike a "real" business. USA universities are also moving in a big way to SharePoint several already moved thousands of students into it recently. Martin Martin WP Reid Training and Assessment Unit Riddle Hall Belfast tel: 02890 974477 ________________________________ From: dba-tech-bounces at databaseadvisors.com on behalf of Gustav Brock Sent: Sun 14/01/2007 11:26 To: dba-tech at databaseadvisors.com Subject: Re: [dba-Tech] MS Binder Hi Arthur People and small companies are generally not very "advanced" computer users - and for those few that are, their clients or customers or suppliers they communicate with are not. That's why I don't see a glorious future for things like SharePoint server. Most users just don't get it, and people like us - who are supposed to be able to find out the inner ideas and secrets of such products and spread the word - are busy with other tasks. /gustav PS: Having Word to keep hold on 200 documents - in some confident way - would kill my sleep. Wouldn't there be another way to do this - like a true document store or database? >>> artful at rogers.com 14-01-2007 02:56:55 >>> So I have the O2k virgin installed already. I don't want to trap myself though. I suppose that I can experiment, reading a couple of dozen files into a Binder wrapper, and see what happens. I wonder why they dropped it. I would have thought such a technology to have legs. Example: combine several Word documents, several Excel worksheets and several Access reports into one file, with intelligent pagination. Am I the only guy in the world who needs to do this? Perhaps. A. ----- Original Message ---- From: Peter Brawley <peter.brawley at earthlink.net> To: Discussion of Hardware and Software issues <dba-tech at databaseadvisors.com> Sent: Saturday, January 13, 2007 8:20:36 PM Subject: Re: [dba-Tech] MS Binder Binder was discontinued after w2k. I think retrosupport can be added via Add/Remove Programs/Microsoft Office. PB artful at rogers.com wrote: > Has Binder been dropped from the Office suite? I have several versions of Office installed, and it seems that the only place Binder lives is in Office 2000. Is that correct, or did it simply fail to install on subsequent versions? > > TIA, > Arthur > > P.S. > I ask because I have a need to collect about 200 documents into one master document. _______________________________________________ dba-Tech mailing list dba-Tech at databaseadvisors.com http://databaseadvisors.com/mailman/listinfo/dba-tech Website: http://www.databaseadvisors.com <http://www.databaseadvisors.com/>