IN THE SPOTLIGHT: MDE to MDB Conversion Service
(also supports: ACCDE to ACCDB, ADE to ADP, etc)
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Access Database Repair Service
An in-depth repair service for corrupt Microsoft Access files
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: vbWatchdog
VBA error handling just got easier...
" vbWatchdog is off the chart. It solves a long standing problem of how to consolidate error handling into one global location and avoid repetitious code within applications. "
- Joe Anderson,
Microsoft Access MVP
Meet Shady, the vbWatchdog mascot watching over your VBA code →
(courtesy of Crystal Long, Microsoft Access MVP)
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: vbMAPI
An Outlook / MAPI code library for VBA, .NET and C# projects
Get emails out to your customers reliably, and without hassle, every single time.
Use vbMAPI alongside Microsoft Outlook to add professional emailing capabilities to your projects.
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Code Protector
Standard compilation to MDE/ACCDE format is flawed and reversible.
He’d found the tool on a forgotten forum—deep in a thread titled “Abandonware & Artifacts.” The description was sparse: Extract, rewrite, re-experience. Use at your own risk.
And that’s when the screen flashed again.
The file was tiny. No installer, just a single .exe named mnemonic.exe . No virus warnings. No prompts. He double-clicked. download memory hacker
His heart hammered. He opened one at random: 2017-08-23_fight_with_mom.dat . The tool rendered it as a script: dialogue, sensory tags, even a “vividness” slider.
Then he downloaded the tool to a USB drive, stood up, and thought: Who else needs a memory hacked? He’d found the tool on a forgotten forum—deep
Leo stared at the blinking cursor on his vintage laptop. "Download Memory Hacker," he typed again, pressing Enter with a sigh.
Inside: thousands of files. Each named with a date and a feeling— 2021-03-14_regret.dat , 2019-11-02_firstkiss.dat , 2005-06-12_dogdying.dat . The file was tiny
Leo selected the file, clicked . A text box appeared: Insert new dialogue for Mom at 21:43.
He sat back, trembling. Then he smiled.
And just like that—the memory in his head changed. Not as a vague wish, but as a visceral replacement. He could feel her saying it, see the kitchen light softer, smell the basil on the counter.