Hello Gerard,
Wednesday, May 15, 2002, 6:44:38 AM, you wrote:
SF>> This didn't work. Canadian postal codes use letters and numbers,
SF>> perhaps that is why.
G> So are the Dutch postalcodes.
SF>> I ended up copying my old registry key from the old installation.
SF>> Thanks for the idea.
G> Go
Hi Scott,
ON Wednesday, May 15, 2002, 5:01:58 AM, you wrote:
G>> If your pw was anything like mine, the company I bought TB from used my
G>> postal areacode. Maybe they used something similar with your purchase?
SF> This didn't work. Canadian postal codes use letters and numbers,
SF> perhaps t
Hello Krister,
On Wed, 15 May 2002 11:37:41 +0200GMT (15-5-02, 11:37 +0200GMT, where
I live), you wrote:
SF>> I ended up copying my old registry key from the old installation.
KE> Now this sounds interesting, what key am i supposed to copy?
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\RIT\The Bat!\SoftwareRegist
Hello Scott,
Wednesday, May 15, 2002, 5:01:58 AM, you wrote:
SF> I ended up copying my old registry key from the old installation.
Now this sounds interesting, what key am i supposed to copy? I have
the Bat! on my laptop, would it help to copy from there?
--
Best regards,
Krister
Hello Gerard,
Thursday, May 09, 2002, 12:38:42 AM, you wrote:
G> If your pw was anything like mine, the company I bought TB from used my
G> postal areacode. Maybe they used something similar with your purchase?
This didn't work. Canadian postal codes use letters and numbers,
perhaps that is why
Scott-
If you can get to the Bat! on your old C: drive then launch it, export
(at least) your global settings, and then import the settings into the
new installation from the .tbk file. That worked for me when I went
from Win95 to Win2k and forgot my password.
Wednesday, May 8, 2002, 9:23:57 PM,
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