August 2014For Microsoft Access, SQL Server,
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We are very pleased to release the Microsoft Access 2013 version of Total Access Statistics, the most popular data analysis program for Microsoft Access. A free trial of the add-in is available to analyze your own data. This joins our recent releases of Microsoft Access 2013 versions of Total Visual Agent, Total Access Emailer, and Total Access Speller. Our development team is busy updating our other products as well.
To maintain the quality of our products and customer service, we've also released a new build of Total Access Analyzer for Access 2010 and 2007. We addressed some issues reported by customers in this free update. Owners were notified by email to download the new version.
In case you missed it, pictures from the recent Portland Access User Group Conference at Silver Falls State Park, Oregon were posted in our Facebook album. PAUG announced the next conference will be May 16-18, 2015 at the same place. Be sure to sign up when they start accepting registrations as the conference sells out each year and space is very limited.
On the evening of September 8th, I'll be guest speaker at the New York City Access User Group meeting at Microsoft's offices in midtown. The user group meetings are free, so I hope to see you there.
And on November 6th, I'll be a speaker at the Access Day event at Microsoft's offices in Bellevue, WA. Last year was the first time they held this event with Microsoft MVP and Access development team speakers. Sure to be a lively and educational event.
From my media experience with Healthcare.gov, I seem to be on a short list of "Technology Experts" the media calls. I was recently invited to comment on the lost emails at the IRS where I explained how hard disks, email and Microsoft Exchange works. It's a funny role that I've found myself playing. I try to remain apolitical and stick to the technology issues since they have plenty of other guests for political spin. I was invited to be on another show, but the Ukraine took precedence. See the article below for a link to the broadcasts.
This newsletter includes much of the news we've shared on our Facebook page, Blog and Twitter feed over the past few months. We hope you've been able to keep up with our various activities and sharing of news. Be sure to visit our Facebook page for the most timely information.
All the best,
Luke Chung
President
Total Access Statistics is the most advanced data analysis program for Microsoft Access. It extends the power of Microsoft Access queries with a wide range of statistical calculations including percentiles, frequency distributions, correlations, regressions, rankings, running totals, financial cash flow analysis, data normalization, crosstabs with Chi-Square, t-Tests, ANOVA, non-parametrics, probabilities, and more.
Total Access Statistics is now available for Microsoft Access 2013 with many enhancements since the prior release of Total Access Statistics 2010:
Here's a complete list of new features. A free trial is also available.
Total Access Analyzer is the most popular Microsoft Access add-in of all time. Analyzing all the objects and code in your database, Total Access Analyzer generates detailed documentation and detects 300+ ways to fix, improve, and speed up your Access applications. We have released free updates of Total Access Analyzer 2007 and 2010:
The updates include the following fixes and enhancements:
Existing customers were already notified with download instructions.
FMS President Luke Chung is the featured guest speaker for the Microsoft Access User Group meeting in New York City.
Luke will discuss and demonstrate FMS products for Microsoft Access, and answer any questions about his experiences with technology, media, and business.
Join him at this free event. More details on our Upcoming Events page.
You've created a Microsoft Access database solution and have successfully distributed it to many people. Everyone is running it properly but one machine is triggering this error. The error message makes no sense and everything you try fails to resolve the problem. What's going on?
Read our new paper Microsoft Access "Class Not Registered" Run-time Error '-2147221164 (80040154)' to learn more about why this occurs and how to resolve it.
Visit our new Microsoft Outlook Tips and Techniques site where we've consolidated our white papers on using Microsoft Outlook more effectively:
And more!
The Microsoft Outlook center joins our Microsoft Access Developer and VBA Help Center and Microsoft Access Query Help Center as sites where we share our original white papers and experiences to use Microsoft products more productively.
We've updated several white papers:
Visit the main Microsoft Access Developer and VBA Programming Help Center site for more resources.
How did the IRS not have backups and lose Lois Lerner's emails and other files? Who came up with their backup and disaster recovery plan? Wrong policies, incorrect execution? Incompetence or intentional?
A 3.5 minute live interview with Sean Hannity in New York with Luke at their Washington, DC studio.
A more in-depth 14 minute discussion with David Kennedy on his radio show. Luke starts about 2:30 after the introduction. Additional appearances on the Sean Hannity TV and Radio Shows, Other Shows
Have you been curious about Microsoft cloud offering of Office365? No longer interested in hosting your own Exchange Server? Want to have your infrastructure in a secure data center with high reliability and resilience?
If so, we have Free Trials for Office365. We also have trial links to Microsoft Dynamics CRM. Test it out and see if you like it.
We switched to Office365 over a year ago starting with our Exchange Server. We already had our email hosted offsite, but moving it to Office365 was relatively smooth and made it easier and cheaper to support different mobile devices. We then migrated our SharePoint platform to Office365. That was a bit more challenging with the changes between SharePoint versions.
Now with our hosted SharePoint site, we're experimenting with Access 2013 Web Apps that are integrated directly with SQL Azure databases for our internal and external users. Since it's hosted on SQL Azure, you can also link to the tables directly from your Access desktop databases.
Try it out for free and let us know what you think.
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Thank you! Thank you! I just finished reading this document, which was part of a link in the recent Buzz newsletter. I have printed it for others to read, especially those skeptical on the powers of Access and its capabilities.
Darren D.