Colin

A subscription to Office 365 in Australia costs $119 AUD each year.
Cheaper than buying Office Professional and keeping it anywhere near up
to date - especially since you can run it on multiple devices.
I've had a subscription for at least 2 years now.

I tried Open Office for a short while but found it a frustrating
experience. I guess I was a power user of Word at the time.

Cathy

Colin Charman wrote:
>
> Yes its quite expensive to buy MS Office Professional. I think MS want
> to change their customer base over to Office365 - their rentals
> scheme. It would cost roughly the amount you mentioned for one PC -
> but they also have a rental plan that covers up to 5 devices, which
> I'd need to cover my desktop and laptop. They have to make a living
> somehow and having millions of Office2000 users doesnt contribute
> anything!
>
> I think the most likely route might be Libre Office - the successor to
> Open Office. I've read something that suggests there may be VBA
> support with their version of Base (Access), but I couldnt get Libre
> to open an Access database today when I tried. I'm playing with
> railway engines tomorrow so I'll have another look at LibreOffice
> later on.
>
> Regards,
> Colin Charman
>
>
> On 09/02/2016 14:50, Gerald E Boor wrote:
>>
>>
>> Colin, it's amazing to me that getting Microsoft Access in the UK
>> would be that expensive. But for awhile, I rented the complete
>> Microsoft Office Suite, which included Word, Excel, PowerPoint and
>> Access for $6.99per month, U.S. dollars. Just go to the Microsoft
>> Office website and see what their current offerings are. It allowed
>> me to download the entire suite, but when I decided to migrate to
>> MySQL and to save money, I gave it up. It is still on my desktop, but
>> because I am no longer a subscriber, it is READ ONLY. Food for
>> thought, but SQLmight also do what you require. Jerry Boor,
>> MerriamFamilyTree.org
>>
>> On February 9, 2016, at 08:29, Hannigan Family Research
>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> >Colin,
>> >Have you tried LibreOffice? Their Access component is also
>> called 'Base' and can be downloaded at www.libreoffice.org.
>> >John
>> >ÂÂ
>> >
>> >On Tuesday 2 9 2016 6:44 AM, Colin Charman wrote:
>> >
>> >This should probably be in the Tools Utilities thread, but as Ive
>> only just joined this group after using Legacy for 20+ years, I cant
>> figure out how to post into a thread! (any clues welcome)
>> >I'm doing a one-name study and thus I have several hundred people in
>> my file called "William Charman" - Legacy isnt too much help in
>> locating the right one so Ive written numerous MS Access queries that
>> just help me find the right one amongst many similarly named
>> individuals - that kind of thing.
>> >Ive also occasionally (and very very carefully) used MS Access to
>> update the fbd file - I grew up in IT so I know about backups,
>> testing, etc.
>> >For some years Ive wondered about using an alternative to Microsoft
>> Access. I'm still using Access 2000 and to purchase a 
>> modern
>> equivalent is really quite expensive - about $400-$500 here in
>> UK. Ive tried Open Office but can't see a way to link to 
>> the
>> Legacy .fdb file. I know I can set up an .mdb file containing links
>> to the .fdb file, and Open Office can open that as a kind of
>> surrogate. Has anyone found a way of opening or making a
>> link to an .fdb file in Open Office?
>> >Even if this were possible, there is another problem in interpreting
>> Legacy dates. In MS Access I have a home written VBA function which
>> turns the 18-byte legacy date into a readable format. As 
>> far
>> as I know, Open Office supports some kind of VBA in its equivalent of
>> Word, Excel and Powerpoint - but I cant find it in Base (its
>> equivalent of Access). Does anyone here know whether Open
>> Office or its relatives can run VBA?
>> >And lastly, are there any (free!) alternatives to MS-Access or
>> OpenOffice that might do the trick?
>> >
>





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