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Microsoft Access is designed to scale to support more data and users by linking to multiple Access databases or using a back-end database like Microsoft SQL Server. With the latter design, the amount of data and users can scale to enterprise-level solutions. Microsoft Access's role in web development prior to version 2010 is limited.
Microsoft's personal finance software (Flintstones theme) [citation needed] Betty Money 2.0 [citation needed] Budapest Microsoft Office Communicator Web Access 2005 [citation needed] Bullet Microsoft Mail 3.0 Microsoft's first LAN-based email product written in-house [citation needed] Cirrus Microsoft Access 1.0 [citation needed] CRM V1.0, Tsunami
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Jet, being part of a relational database management system (RDBMS), allows the manipulation of relational databases. [1] It offers a single interface that other software can use to access Microsoft databases and provides support for security, referential integrity, transaction processing, indexing, record and page locking, and data replication.
Ability to use Microsoft SQL Server, Microsoft Office Access, or other databases as back-end data repository. Multiple views for the same forms, to expose different features to different class of users. Template Parts, used to group Office InfoPath controls for use later. Template parts retain its XML schema.
When personal computers were initially released in the 1970s and 1980s, they typically included a version of BASIC so that customers could write their own programs. . Microsoft's first products were BASIC compilers and interpreters, and the company distributed versions of BASIC with MS-DOS (versions 1.0 through 6.0) and developed follow-on products that offered more features and capabilities ...
The name Microsoft Foundation Classes (MFC) was adopted too late in the release cycle to change these references. MFC 8.0 was released with Visual Studio 2005. MFC 9.0 was released with Visual Studio 2008. On April 7, 2008, Microsoft released an update to the MFC classes as an out-of-band update to Visual Studio 2008 and MFC 9.
Originally deemed ASP.NET vNext, the framework was going to be called ASP.NET 5 when ready. However, in order to avoid implying it is an update to the existing ASP.NET framework, Microsoft later changed the name to ASP.NET Core at the 1.0 release.