What keeps causing this to occur? The solution seems to be just opening the backend file and it auto-repairs itself. But, how do I prevent this in the first place? I'm not sure what background info to provide, please ask away.
Thanks, that looks like it could be it. I'm a little confused about how to perform those steps when the backend file is stored on a server. I've asked our IT people to try it, since I presume they have access to the server machine itself.
Thanks, that looks like it could be it. I'm a little confused about how to perform those steps when the backend file is stored on a server. I've asked our IT people to try it, since I presume they have access to the server machine itself.
"In fact, you should only need to apply the Registry Hack to the server housing the back-end file. You do NOT need to apply the registry hack to each user’s PC.
So basically, go onto the Server, open a Command Prompt and run the 3 lines provided in Microsoft’s article (above) and everything should fall back into place."
"In fact, you should only need to apply the Registry Hack to the server housing the back-end file. You do NOT need to apply the registry hack to each user’s PC.
So basically, go onto the Server, open a Command Prompt and run the 3 lines provided in Microsoft’s article (above) and everything should fall back into place."