On 2018-04-18 14:32, Ted Roche wrote:
We moved the DLL to the same folder as the EXE and it's working now.
Another example where putting it in the same folder was better advice
than the official M$ way. lol
___
Post Messages to: ProFox@leafe.com
I remember a prior release of VFP (6 or 8) compiled EXE's would C005 on
startup due to a bad path.
That was always hard to resolve over the phone prior to remote access tools.
-Original Message-
From: ProfoxTech [mailto:profoxtech-boun...@leafe.com] On Behalf Of Ted
Roche
Sent:
On Wed, Apr 18, 2018 at 2:26 PM, Tracy Pearson wrote:
> That specific EXE is now blocked by the local anti-virus solution.
> A customer had that problem a few weeks back. I never heard the results after
> we pointed out a second VFP app worked with the tools in question
That specific EXE is now blocked by the local anti-virus solution.
A customer had that problem a few weeks back. I never heard the results after
we pointed out a second VFP app worked with the tools in question without a
problem. We could not get in to the settings of the A/V to un-ban the EXE,
The C++ runtime DLL possibly blocked?
--
rk
-Original Message-
From: ProfoxTech On Behalf Of Ted Roche
Sent: Wednesday, April 18, 2018 1:22 PM
To: profoxt...@leafe.com
Subject: Re: "Cannot load 32-bit DDL wwipstuff.dll"
Thanks for the thread reference.
Thanks for the thread reference. We're clueless, but not THAT clueless.
Working app this morning, not working this afternoon, same machine.
Project had to be rebuilt from scratch, and I suspect a file was omitted.
I need to follow some basic debugging procedures here. The client's
crisis over
C++ runtime (msvcrtxx) or other dll dependency
May be this can help:
https://support.west-wind.com/Thread4T60C0F5O.wwt
El mié., 18 abr. 2018 18:51, Ted Roche escribió:
> Someone in the office hit this today.
>
> Win10, 674-bit fully updated.
>
> This project has been
Someone in the office hit this today.
Win10, 674-bit fully updated.
This project has been running fine.
The project crashed this morning and had to be rebuilt and only now
does the above error show up.
What's the most likely thing you'd check?
The DLL's in the path.
--
Ted Roche
Ted Roche &
Saving users who travel a lot by swapping out a laptop with a tablet that
can run Office 365 in the cloud is a smart direction for the company or
user to consider.
On Wed, Apr 18, 2018 at 10:56 AM, Ted Roche wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 18, 2018 at 6:53 AM, Alan Bourke
On Wed, Apr 18, 2018 at 6:53 AM, Alan Bourke wrote:
> I could see them doing a Chromebook-style affair with Office 365 subscription
> , using the browser based versions of Word et al.
>
> Perhaps with the capability of running the Microsoft Store and UWP apps.
>
I agree, they have enough software for getting lots of money with licenses
(visual studio, office, etc) to be worried about the OS.
But if happens, will no be after 5 or 10 years
El mié., 18 abr. 2018 12:53, Alan Bourke escribió:
> I could see them doing a
We have hundreds of customers across everything from aerospace to meat packing
to game development, and almost without exception they're on MS Office, and
latterly Office 365.
If your requirements go beyond very simple documents in any way and/or you have
requirements to exchange them with
I could see them doing a Chromebook-style affair with Office 365 subscription ,
using the browser based versions of Word et al.
Perhaps with the capability of running the Microsoft Store and UWP apps.
--
Alan Bourke
alanpbourke (at) fastmail (dot) fm
On Wed, Apr 18, 2018 at 4:57 AM, Alan Bourke wrote:
> It wouldn't surprise me if we saw a Microsoft desktop distro in the next 10
> years.
Really? What do you think would be the selling points? The special features?
I know Oracle has their own Linux, a rebranded Red
It wouldn't surprise me if we saw a Microsoft desktop distro in the next 10
years.
--
Alan Bourke
alanpbourke (at) fastmail (dot) fm
On Tue, 17 Apr 2018, at 11:38 PM, Ted Roche wrote:
> Microsoft’s Next OS is Based on Linux, Not Windows
>
>
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