Aaron,
Answers in-line...
--
Gina Whipp
"I feel I have been denied critical, need to know, information!" - Tremors
II
http://www.regina-whipp.com/index_files/TipList.htm
Aaron Reichow said:
I found this thread when googling about for an answer to my question- which
is the same as pas926's.
I'd ask it again: is there a way I can add a network location as a Trusted
Location? Or better yet, turn off the entire kludge of "Trusted Locations"
entirely? At least for Access?
Tom, your answer doesn't entirely hash. In my case, the reason for setting
up a network location as a Trusted Location has nothing to do with where
the
back-end lives. Instead, the Access file containing our front-end resides
on
our file server. A few different folks might need to open the MDB and
make
some changes to the VB or the forms within, and more importantly we want
our
end-users to be opening the newest version of the MDB, not whatever old
version they copied to their desktop last.
I'm not sure why end users would need to make changes to the forms, however,
they couldn't do this while anyone was in the same front end. What should
happen si there is one development copy that changes are applied to and then
it is distributed to the end users. You could use...
http://www.granite.ab.ca/access/autofe.htm This utility is GREAT and
recommended by most.
If anything, it's seems like circumventing best practices to fall into the
trap of having 11 divergent versions of a file spread between 10 different
individual PCs and the office file server.
I cannot begin to answer this question as I do not allow end users to make
modifications. I have the development copy and all changes are applied to
it. When I want to run out updates I 'connect' and drop my latest one in
place. In one case I drop it in and a batch file runs when they log into
Terminal Services and if their front end needs updating it happens during
the log in process.
I'm surprised by this- it's 2009, not 1989. Having multiple people work on
a
single file stored on a central file server on the office Intranet is
pretty
darn common.
Perhaps this is common in your world but in the Access world it is not
common. Sharing a front end is HIGHLY frowned upon.
For information about splitting and why you should split....
http://allenbrowne.com/ser-01.html
http://www.members.shaw.ca/AlbertKallal/Articles/split/