N
nokian
This is what I did and it works, go try for yourself.
Take a look in the Fonts folder of the system. Are there more than 50
fonts in there?
If yes, then you need to delete all the fonts that are not needed. I
use Font Frenzy and it will remove all un-needed fonts and leave you
with the Windows Base Fonts that are required. Reboot your system and
start Access. Access will go through the standard "new setup stuff"
when its done you should be able to print. My expereince is that
Windows will start and load every installed font into memory, then
when you start Access, it loads every font back into memory a second
time. Too many fonts and not enough resources.
Jason Shannon
(e-mail address removed)
Take a look in the Fonts folder of the system. Are there more than 50
fonts in there?
If yes, then you need to delete all the fonts that are not needed. I
use Font Frenzy and it will remove all un-needed fonts and leave you
with the Windows Base Fonts that are required. Reboot your system and
start Access. Access will go through the standard "new setup stuff"
when its done you should be able to print. My expereince is that
Windows will start and load every installed font into memory, then
when you start Access, it loads every font back into memory a second
time. Too many fonts and not enough resources.
Jason Shannon
(e-mail address removed)