Problem with Doc-to-Help 2009 Build 480 on Windows 7
Posted: Wed Jun 01, 2016 12:54 am
Hello all,
I have a question about a legacy version of Doc-to-Help, which is causing me some difficulty.
My organisation (the National Health Service – NHS – in Wales) has been using Doc-to-Help for over 20 years, going back to the Wextech days. Our usage has stabilised around one or two of our key products, which we have continued to maintain using Doc-to-Help 2009 (Build 480) on Windows XP.
We have run into problems recently when trying to upgrade to Windows 7, and not being able to get the 2009 480 Build to install properly. It gives errors about missing DLLs, which I believe relate to the Microsoft Visual C++ run time library not being present. I have found reference on one of the legacy Doc-to-Help forums to this problem, and the view seems to be that Build 480 won’t install on Windows 7, but Build 500 will. This is supported by our testing, where 500 will install, BUT will not accept any of our licence keys from the earlier version as being valid.
This seems strange to me for a minor build release, particularly one aimed at ensuring Windows 7 compatibility, and hence I’d be grateful if somebody could confirm that this is correct. Assuming so, is it still possible to obtain keys for Build 500? Is this an admin exercise, or was 500 a chargeable upgrade? I appreciate this may be an unusual request, but I’m trying to balance sticking with the legacy version for our legacy product, against doing a full upgrade to the latest version, but which we be unfamiliar with, and almost certainly wouldn’t get full benefit from, at least in the short term.
Many thanks
Ken Leake
I have a question about a legacy version of Doc-to-Help, which is causing me some difficulty.
My organisation (the National Health Service – NHS – in Wales) has been using Doc-to-Help for over 20 years, going back to the Wextech days. Our usage has stabilised around one or two of our key products, which we have continued to maintain using Doc-to-Help 2009 (Build 480) on Windows XP.
We have run into problems recently when trying to upgrade to Windows 7, and not being able to get the 2009 480 Build to install properly. It gives errors about missing DLLs, which I believe relate to the Microsoft Visual C++ run time library not being present. I have found reference on one of the legacy Doc-to-Help forums to this problem, and the view seems to be that Build 480 won’t install on Windows 7, but Build 500 will. This is supported by our testing, where 500 will install, BUT will not accept any of our licence keys from the earlier version as being valid.
This seems strange to me for a minor build release, particularly one aimed at ensuring Windows 7 compatibility, and hence I’d be grateful if somebody could confirm that this is correct. Assuming so, is it still possible to obtain keys for Build 500? Is this an admin exercise, or was 500 a chargeable upgrade? I appreciate this may be an unusual request, but I’m trying to balance sticking with the legacy version for our legacy product, against doing a full upgrade to the latest version, but which we be unfamiliar with, and almost certainly wouldn’t get full benefit from, at least in the short term.
Many thanks
Ken Leake