Thank you for the response, Bill. I already have Office 365 Personal as a monthly subscription, but when I contacted Microsoft through online chat, they told me I needed Microsoft SQL Server to create a web-based Microsoft Access database. I guess their support is not that great for web-based Access, but at least I can learn some fundamentals before migrating to MySQL. Thanks for the information. Jerry Boor, Rochester Hills, Michigan, USA
Sun Dec 28, 2014 4:20 pm (PST) . Posted by:
"Bill Mosca" wrmosca
Sorry you haven't been getting the responses you hoped for. This group really is for all levels of Access skill from the "What the heck is Access?" to the working developer. So you are most welcome to post whatever questions you have.
I would go with a MySQL database hosted by your web provider and web pages written in ASP or PHP or whatever the latest trend is these days. In my opinion, MS still hasn't got Access-to-web stuff ready for prime time. Access still relies on SharePoint even though the data is in an SQL Server Azure instance.
The only other thing I can suggest is to use Office 365, but you don't seem to want to do that. My Office 365 account is used mainly to host my website (which has been pretty much left on its own for over a year. I can't seem to be able to squeeze in any time to work on it due to an enormous workload right now). But my website doesn't do any transactions so I can't say how good that aspect of Office is. I do know that Access web apps are very limited. No VBA code, smaller set of macro actions, etc.
Regards,
Bill Mosca,
Founder, MS_Access_Professionals
That'll do IT <http://thatlldoit.com/> http://thatlldoit.com
MS Access MVP
<http://mvp.microsoft.com/en-us/mvp/Bill%20Mosca-35852> http://mvp.microsoft.com/en-us/mvp/Bill%20Mosca-35852
__._,_.___
Posted by: Jerry <bearjercares@gmail.com>
Reply via web post | • | Reply to sender | • | Reply to group | • | Start a New Topic | • | Messages in this topic (4) |
.
__,_._,___
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar