Catastrophic error

  • Thread starter Thread starter Guest
  • Start date Start date
G

Guest

I have installed Producer and currently have Office 2003 installed on my
system. When I go to publish the file Producer gives me a Catastrophic error.
Does anyone know a resolution to this problem.
 
Hi,

Catastrophic is relative. I walked outside and the moon is the correct way
up. Upside down would be catastrophic!

Anyway, I'm not belittling your problem. It could be that Producer thinks
2007 is the main version installed and wont believe you have 2003 still
installed. Have you tried to reinstall producer? I know that Producer is
certainly not supported in 2007. If I had an Internet explorer that worked
I'd look further, sorry.

--

Regards,
Glen Millar
Microsoft PPT MVP

Tutorials and PowerPoint animations at
the original www.pptworkbench.com
glen at pptworkbench dot com
 
John Wilson said:
But surely the Moon is upside down in Ozland???

It is, but since he is too, it's still above his head and he thinks it's all
ok.

More details will only upset him.

Shhhhh.
 
Hi,

Only the bats and flying foxes see the moon the way you folks do, when they
are hanging upside down for a sleep!

--

Regards,
Glen Millar
Microsoft PPT MVP

Tutorials and PowerPoint animations at
the original www.pptworkbench.com
glen at pptworkbench dot com
------------------------------------------
 
Hi,

Only the bats and flying foxes see the moon the way you folks do, when they
are hanging upside down for a sleep!

A clear case of "Two wrongs make a right(side up)"
 
Which is strange, because two rights sends you back in the direction you
came.

Bill D.
 
So on, average, you haven't turned either direction.

--

Regards,
Glen Millar
Microsoft PPT MVP

Tutorials and PowerPoint animations at
the original www.pptworkbench.com
glen at pptworkbench dot com
------------------------------------------
 
I'm not sure, but I think we decided that if you have made 8 wrongs, you
have not come full circle.

2 wrongs <> 1 right
2 rights = turn around
2 turn abouts = full circle
therefore 8 wrongs <> full circle


of course you can also say that the standard deviation of our sample is
equivalent to the range of the samples.

Bill D.
 
Bill,

If the circle was 3d, it might be a torus.....

A lecturer once stood before us,
comparing the sphere and the torus.
"With pi groups distinct,
they're different!" he winked,
but loop classes just seemed to bore us.


http://www.mathreference.com/jokes.html

--

Regards,
Glen Millar
Microsoft PPT MVP

Tutorials and PowerPoint animations at
the original www.pptworkbench.com
glen at pptworkbench dot com
------------------------------------------
 
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