Greetings to the well of knowledge...
All of my Access DBs are front-ends that talk to our central SQL Server. I manage the development and release new versions on a fairly frequent basis. I install the "gold" copy of the Access DB on a network share and instruct my users to take a copy of the DB and paste it to their desktops. They are instructed to NOT run the copy on the network share.
All of my end users run Access 2016 runtime.
Now under Windows 7, users would get a warning about the DB not being a trusted document. I just instruct them to enable content and go on their way.
Under Windows 10, users do not get this warning so are not able to enable content and continue. Instead, the DB just closes with no errors.
So it sounds as though I need do something trust-related.
My question, then, is: if I establish a trust with the copy of the DB that resides in the network share and an end user takes a copy of the DB to their desktop, does the trust follow to the copy?
I hope I explained that well enough.
Thanks,
Ken
All of my Access DBs are front-ends that talk to our central SQL Server. I manage the development and release new versions on a fairly frequent basis. I install the "gold" copy of the Access DB on a network share and instruct my users to take a copy of the DB and paste it to their desktops. They are instructed to NOT run the copy on the network share.
All of my end users run Access 2016 runtime.
Now under Windows 7, users would get a warning about the DB not being a trusted document. I just instruct them to enable content and go on their way.
Under Windows 10, users do not get this warning so are not able to enable content and continue. Instead, the DB just closes with no errors.
So it sounds as though I need do something trust-related.
My question, then, is: if I establish a trust with the copy of the DB that resides in the network share and an end user takes a copy of the DB to their desktop, does the trust follow to the copy?
I hope I explained that well enough.
Thanks,
Ken