Saturday, March 21, 2026

AI Slop Is Flooding Tech Tutorials

For years now, YouTube has been flooded with those awful "tutorials" that have no voiceover, just background music and someone randomly clicking through menus expecting you to somehow absorb what they're doing by osmosis. You know the ones. No explanation, no context, no teaching, just click click click and hope you figure it out. And honestly, I've never really worried about those. Most people watch about ten seconds, realize they're not learning anything, and move on to something actually useful.

YouTube tutorial quality and misleading videos

However, I ran into something yesterday that's been bothering me more and more lately, and it's something I think everyone needs to be aware of, especially if you're learning anything technical online. I was doing my usual keyword searches, looking for gaps where I might want to create new Microsoft Access tutorials. I came across a video that looked solid at first glance. Clean thumbnail, decent title, clean-sounding voiceover (although it sounded AI-generated to me). It looked and sounded professional - like the creator knew what he was talking about. The topic was using the Count function in Access. Simple enough.

Except the content was completely wrong. Not slightly off. Not a minor mistake. As my wife likes to say, "one-thousand percent" wrong. Here's the video. You watch it and tell me if you can spot the problem. On the surface it looked Starfleet. Under the hood, it was pure Pakled engineering. We need things that make us go.

The video walks through building a query and claims to demonstrate the Count function, but what it actually does is create a simple alias field that just repeats data from another column. There is no aggregation. No totals. No counting. It's the kind of mistake you only make if you don't actually understand how Access queries work.

So I left a comment. Politely, but clearly, explaining the issue (1). Then I looked at the rest of the channel. Dozens of videos. All short. All polished thumbnails. All pumped out at a rapid pace. It's pretty obvious what's going on. This isn't someone teaching from experience. This is someone cranking out content as fast as possible, likely leaning heavily on AI, without actually understanding the material. And that's the real problem.

I love AI. I use it every day. It's fantastic for brainstorming, tightening up writing, catching things I might have missed, and helping organize ideas. It's a great assistant. But it's not a substitute for actual knowledge or experience. What we're starting to see now is a flood of what is being called AI slop. Content that looks professional on the surface but falls apart the moment you actually understand the subject. And for beginners, that's dangerous, because they don't yet know what's right and what's nonsense.

If you're learning Access, or anything technical, be careful who you trust. Just because a video looks good doesn't mean the information is correct. Watch for red flags. Things that don't quite make sense. Results that don't match the explanation. Inconsistencies. And if something feels off, it probably is. There's a lot of great content out there from people who actually know what they're doing. But there's also a growing pile of noise. Your job is to learn how to tell the difference.

And to be clear, this isn't me hating on some new creator. I love seeing new people making videos about Microsoft Access. Anything that brings more awareness to Access and helps grow the community is a good thing. I routinely highlight and promote other creators when they're putting out good, useful content. I share links, I give credit where it's due, and I actively try to support the community as a whole.

Heck, I even repost Mike Wolfe's Access Week in Review on my site every Sunday specifically to help promote other Access developers, articles, and videos. I've got zero problem sending traffic to other people when they're doing solid work. There's plenty of room for all of us, and more quality content only helps everyone.

What I do have a problem with is garbage content. Stuff like those articles that trash Access just to funnel you into expensive "conversion services," or the so-called recovery tools that charge you for something you can fix yourself in ten minutes, or creators like this who are clearly just cranking out AI-generated filler to chase keywords on YouTube and Google. It's all noise, and it muddies the waters for people who are genuinely trying to learn.

This kind of low-effort, high-volume content is everywhere right now, especially on YouTube and TikTok. It looks polished on the surface, but there's no real understanding behind it. And that's the part people need to watch out for. Just because something looks professional doesn't mean it's correct. (2)

LLAP
RR

(1) My comment: This video does not show what it claims to show. What you've built here is not a Count query. The field Count: Company is just a calculated field with an alias. It simply repeats the Company value under a different column name. No counting is happening at all. In Microsoft Access, Count only works as an aggregate function. You have to enable Totals (the Sigma button) or write an aggregate query like Count. Without that, the query still returns one row per record, which is exactly what your result shows. A real Count query would return a single total (or grouped totals), not a full list of records with duplicated values. You explained the concept correctly, but the actual implementation in the video is incorrect.

(2) This kind of thing isn't limited to tech tutorials. You see it all over the place, in politics, in science, in everyday life. Just because someone has a big platform, a polished presentation, or the loudest voice repeating something over and over doesn't make it true. Meanwhile, the people who actually know what they're talking about are often quieter, more measured, and easier to overlook. It's human nature to gravitate toward confidence and repetition, but that's not the same as accuracy. So take a step back, think critically, and don't assume something is correct just because it's being broadcast loudly and confidently.

Friday, March 20, 2026

Your Microsoft Access Backup Plan Might Be Missing This Critical Step - QQ #84

Think your backups are ironclad? Think again. Until you actually restore from a backup and check that everything works, you're putting faith in something you've never tested. So let's get to the nitty gritty of making sure your databases are protected, your data is normalized, and your reminders pop up when they should, no matter what time zone you - and your data - end up in. We'll tackle all that, plus some handy design tips for Access, in today's walk-through. Your future self will thank you for being proactive instead of reactive!

Instead of reciting horror stories all day, let's jump right into some of the most important Access lessons you might not have realized you need. Whether it's about saving data (and why that "Save" button isn't in Access), handling backups, importing from multiple sources (like your bank's CSVs), or making sure your reminders keep up with your global travel schedule, these tips will help you avoid some costly mistakes. Plus, you'll pick up clever tricks for keeping your forms tidy and your relationships normalized!

Let's start with something that throws a lot of Access newcomers: there's no obvious Save button. Unlike Word or Excel, Access quietly saves any changes to your data automatically - once you move off the record or close the form, those edits are written to the table. If a record is "dirty" - meaning you're editing but haven't left the row yet - nothing's committed. For most databases, this invisible Save is all you need. But if you (or your users) need the psychological comfort of a Save and Cancel option, you can always add custom buttons using a bit of VBA or a macro for more control. Still, for seasoned Access users, the built-in auto-save is usually best.

Design tip: when you're trying to draw perfectly straight lines on an Access form, hold down the Shift key! It forces the line tool to draw perfectly straight, even if your mouse drifts. Also, you can fine-tune control positions using the arrow keys; hold down Ctrl to move objects just a single "twip" (that's a tiny unit in Access). For additional polish, you can set line thickness or colors on the Format tab. These little tricks make your database look sharp and professional.

If you handle financial data, you might already know that importing bank or PayPal CSV files is a double-edged sword - duplicates creep in fast. The trick is to use a staging table: first import all transactions, then compare each to what's already in your real register using a unique identifier (like a transaction ID or reference number). Delete any that are already in your register, and import only the new ones. If your data lacks a unique ID, compare multiple fields (date, amount, and description) to spot duplicates, but use caution - sometimes valid transactions share those details. For accounts that only allow PDF exports, AI can be a surprising ally; feed AI the PDF-turned-text and have it generate structured data for import. It's a more advanced developer task, perfect for merging all your year-end statements stress-free.

Speaking of global stress, here's a common headache: Access reminders and appointments across time zones. Access only stores the date and time you give it - no built-in time zone field. For most users, that's fine because Windows will update your system clock automatically when you travel. If you want enterprise-grade accuracy (maybe you have users worldwide), store all dates as UTC (Universal Time) and convert them to local times as needed, using VBA or queries. But honestly, if you're the only one using the database, just let Windows handle the time zone and keep on moving.

Tackling normalization: when your auto table and parts table both need dealer information, don't create separate dealer tables! Store all dealer records in one dealer table, then reference the dealer in any related tables using a dealer ID. This avoids duplicated information and fits best practices - there's no limit to how many places you can relate that dealer ID. When you need to track multiple relationships (like a customer who deals with several employees for different roles), add separate fields for each relationship, each pointing to the same underlying employee table. This keeps your data tidy and avoids redundancy.

Now, automation in Access doesn't happen by magic - something has to trigger those reminders and actions. If you want a pop-up alert for an upcoming vehicle registration expiration, for example, you have to decide when to check for expiring registrations: when the database opens, when you view a record, or via a scheduled report. The simplest method? Build a query that finds expiring registrations and print or view it regularly. For more automation, use VBA to run checks on form load or at set intervals. Remember, Access only knows to do something if you tell it when and how - nothing just "happens" on its own.

Small side note for anyone worried about running 32-bit Office on a 64-bit version of Windows: that's totally fine and very common. Crashes and 'shut down' errors are usually caused by issues like bad references, code mishaps, memory, or sometimes overzealous antivirus software messing with disk read/write. Follow a systematic troubleshooting checklist before blaming bitness. And yes, sometimes antivirus software causes more harm than good with Access databases. Don't overlook it in your troubleshooting - it's more common than you think.

Most importantly, I've seen too many people set up backups and never actually verify them. Making backups is only half the battle; testing restores is what really makes you safe. Every so often, restore a backup to a new location and make sure you've got every crucial file - including ACCDBs and any linked data. I've helped people in tears because only part of their data was in the daily backup and subfolders had been missed. Don't trust a green "backup successful" message - test those backups. Future you, with all your data intact, will be grateful.

The bottom line: regularly restore your backups and check your files. Normalize your data to avoid redundancy. Understand how time zones and automation work in Access. And, always troubleshoot carefully (don't forget about that sneaky antivirus). If you want the hands-on details, check out the video above for deeper exploration and step-by-step guides. If you have thoughts, questions, or Access puzzles of your own, drop them in the comments below - I read them all!

Live long and prosper,
RR

Thursday, March 19, 2026

How to Create a Report in Microsoft Access (Step-by-Step Beginner Tutorial)

Let's face it: all those glorious tables and queries you've built in Access don't mean much until you can share that data with someone else - whether you want to print it, email it, or save it as a PDF. That's where reports come in. If you need to turn your Access data into something polished, neat, and printable, welcome to your first Access report tutorial. Let's dive in and learn how to create a Microsoft Access report from scratch - step by step, minus the tears and confusion!

A report in Access is built for one thing: to present your data cleanly and professionally to people who don't (or won't) poke around in your database. Confused about reports versus forms? You're not alone. Just remember: forms are for entering and viewing data on the screen, reports are for printing, exporting, or sharing that data. Think of forms as input and reports as output. Sure, you can print a form, but reports are designed for presentation - so you get something tidy to hand out, email, or archive.

To create a report, you'll need a data source. This can be a table or, better yet, a well-designed query. For our example, let's pull from a customer table containing basic info like Customer ID, first name, last name, and phone number. Now, Access tries to be helpful with one-click report creation: just select your table, click "Create," then hit "Report." Fast? Yes. Pretty? Not so much. I suggest skipping this and using the Report Wizard instead - it's actually a good wizard, not some evil database gremlin.

Open up the Report Wizard and pick your table or query. Choose the fields you want to appear in your report (for a simple customer report, maybe Customer ID, First Name, Last Name, Email, and Phone Number). Don't feel pressured to use every field - keep it clear and focused. Hit "Next" to move forward. The wizard will ask about grouping and sorting: for now, sort by last name and first name. Next, select your layout (I recommend "Columnar" for your first go). Give your report a title ("Customers" works just fine), preview it, and click "Finish." Voila! Access builds your report, lays out each customer neatly, and you're ready to make tweaks as needed.

You'll probably want to polish things up. Maybe you notice numbers are awkwardly right-aligned while text is flush left - so hop into Design View, select your fields (like Customer ID), and set their alignment to left for consistency. Save your changes before previewing again. Trust me, this little polish makes a world of visual difference when your report lands in someone else's hands.

Next, let's talk organization. I like naming conventions so I know immediately what I'm looking at. For reports, tack an "R" on the end of the name - so "CustomerR" or "CustomerPhoneListR." Makes navigation easier when your database gets crowded with forms, queries, and reports galore.

Ready for a more advanced trick? Let's group customers by state. Use the Report Wizard, select the Customer table, and add State, First Name, Last Name, and Phone Number fields. In the wizard, add a grouping on State, and sort by First Name and then Last Name. Try the "Stepped" layout - perfect for grouped data. Set your report title (like "CustomerPhoneListR"), finish up, and Access generates a neat, grouped report. Now, each state's customers are listed together. And if someone's state is blank? The report will leave that group empty, which is helpful to spot missing data at a glance.

Design View is your playground. You can move labels, adjust fonts, and tweak layout until your inner perfectionist is satisfied. The different report sections are worth getting to know: Detail is where your data goes, Group Header shows up when you group by something (like State), Page Header/Footer lines the top and bottom of each printed page, and Report Header/Footer appear once at the start and end of the report. If you want to know when a report's printed, look for the date and time in the footer. Want to label your columns for readability? Edit the labels up top - just don't mess with the actual data fields unless you want to see #Error everywhere.

Once your report looks good, printing or exporting is simple. Hit the print button to send it to your default printer, or change paper size, margins, and orientation to suit your needs. If you'd rather email a copy, use the "Export to PDF" option - name your file, click publish, and Access will create a PDF ready to share or archive. Skip "save export steps" unless you really need automation. Your PDF will open in your default viewer, ready for inspection (or, if you're like me, for endlessly checking alignment).

If you'd like to get deeper into report building, there's so much to explore: using queries for tailored reports, building mailing labels, crafting invoices, and learning to condense large data into summary formats for managers who don't want details - just answers. And if you're eager to convert a well-designed form into a matching report, there are tools and tips for that too. Trust me, you can get really creative with grouped totals, dynamic formats, and even inserting your own images and branding.

That's the basic recipe for building great-looking reports in Microsoft Access from scratch without getting lost in the weeds. If you want to see the full click-by-click walk-through, check out the embedded video above.

Live long and prosper,
RR

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

How To Use The Count Function In Microsoft Access

If you've ever used the count function in a Microsoft Access query and scratched your head at some truly baffling numbers, you're definitely not alone. Getting an accurate count out of Access requires a little more than just tossing the word "count" into your query grid and hoping for magic. Let's break down the right way to use the count function and, most importantly, why aggregate queries are your secret weapon for making count behave itself.

Let's jump right in. If you wander into Access and try to count things by simply labeling a field as "count: something" in your query, you're just setting up what's known as an alias. That means you're basically renaming that column for the sake of your query's output, but you're not actually counting anything at all. No calculators are being fired up behind the scenes here - Access just lets you pretend to count while secretly doing nothing. If you've followed other tutorials that let you down this rabbit hole, it's time to see how it's supposed to work.

The key thing you need to understand is that the count function is what's called an aggregate function. That means it works over a group of records, not individual rows. So, simply renaming a column "count" won't cut it. You need to set up an aggregate query, sometimes called a totals query, to get Access to actually tally up your data. If you've never heard of aggregate queries - don't panic, most people searching for "how to count in Access" haven't either. That's why we're tackling it head-on here.

Let's get practical. Suppose you have a customer table and you want to count, say, how many times each first name appears. If you drag FirstName down into a query and just run it, you see all the first names. But if you try to type count: FirstName into the field row and expect it to count - nope! All you've done is create an alias. Instead, what you want is an aggregate query. To turn your query into one, click the Totals button (it looks like a sigma, or a squiggly sideways 'M') on the toolbar. This adds a "Total:" row beneath each field.

Now, next to your field in the Total row you'll see "Group By" by default - this means Access will group all identical values together. If you change the Total row from "Group By" to "Count" under a field like FirstName, Access will collapse identical values and count how many times each one appears. Suddenly, you'll see that Mr. appears three times (hello, Spock, Worf, and Data), while other names show once. If you use "state" instead and bring it down twice - once as "Group By," once as "Count" - you'll see how many customers are from each state. You can even sort this list to see your most popular states at the top.

If you want to count all records in a table, just use a field like CustomerID (which, as an AutoNumber, always contains data for each record). Change its Total row to Count, and Access gives you the total record count. If some fields are blank, like State, using Count on State shows you how many records actually have that info - missing values (nulls) are left out. This is a handy way to spot missing data.

Want to spruce up your results? Change the alias that Access gives your calculated column. Use Shift+F2 to zoom into a field property and rename the output to something more descriptive - like "Customers with states" - so your reports and forms look tidy and your users feel fancy.

But wait - there's more! Aggregate queries also work wonders with related tables. For example, bring in Customers and Orders, join them on CustomerID, and then set the query to group by CustomerID and count OrderID. Voila! You get a list of customers with the count of orders they've placed. You can now quickly spot your best customers (or at least the ones who shop a lot).

Now, here's a classic Access gotcha. If you set up this "count of orders" in your query as "C," and then try to add a calculated field (say, doubling that count with X = C * 2) within the same query, Access will throw up its hands and ask for a parameter value. That's because "C" hasn't been calculated yet when the query engine wants to multiply it. The proper fix: save your aggregate query and build a second query on top of it. In the second query, "C" is now available and you can build as many calculations on top as you want. This is a neat trick that solves about 90% of "Why won't Access let me do basic math?" headaches in aggregate queries.

If you want to really master aggregate queries - sum, average, max, min, and count - check out my other classes and videos for deeper dives. The main lesson today: count will only work correctly in an aggregate query. If you don't see that Totals row (the one with the squiggly sigma), you're not actually getting a count!

Hopefully you're now armed and ready to count just about anything you want in Access with confidence. If you want to see all the button clicks and design views in motion, check out the embedded video above for the full walk-through. Got more burning Access questions? Post a comment - I love a good database mystery!

Live long and prosper,
RR

Access Isn't Broken. It's Just a Sales Pitch.

Once again I've stumbled across another company that's trying to move people out of Access and framing it as an Access problem. This time it's a blog post from a company called GAPVelocity AI, with a headline that reads Why ChatGPT Can't Fix Your Access Database.

Discussion about Microsoft Access and AI-based migration tools

Right out of the gate, you can see where this is going. The article walks through a few familiar talking points. It says Access databases are locked away in binary formats that AI can't fully understand. It talks about how AI can get you maybe 70% of the way through a migration before hitting a wall. And it frames Access as a "monolithic" system that has to be broken apart and rebuilt into a modern web architecture.

Now, on the surface, some of that sounds reasonable. Yes, migrating any complex application to a completely different platform is hard. Yes, AI is not magic and it does not perfectly reconstruct entire systems from partial information. But here's the part they don't emphasize enough. That problem is not unique to Access. That is a universal truth for software migration, whether you're coming from VB6, Java, PowerBuilder, or anything else. What they're really describing is the difficulty of doing a full architectural rewrite, not some fatal flaw in Access itself.

So who are these guys? GAPVelocity AI is part of a larger consulting firm called Growth Acceleration Partners. Their business is modernization. In plain English, they get paid to take "legacy" systems and move them into modern web and cloud platforms like .NET and Blazor. They offer a mix of automated tools and consulting services to help companies convert applications, including Microsoft Access, into something else. That is their product. That is how they make money.

And once you understand that, the tone of the article makes a lot more sense. It's not a neutral, unbiased technical discussion. It's a sales pitch. The message is essentially: your Access system is old, AI can't save you, and you need a specialized tool and a consulting engagement to get out of it. That doesn't mean their tools are useless. For large enterprises that are required to move everything to the web, those kinds of services can absolutely have value. But it does mean you have to read their claims through the lens of their business model.

What gets lost in all of this is what Access actually is and what it does well. Access is not just a "database." It is a rapid application development environment that lets you build complete business solutions quickly and efficiently. It has supported split front-end and back-end architectures for decades. It works beautifully as a front end to SQL Server. And for small to mid-sized businesses, and even many enterprise scenarios, it remains one of the fastest and most cost-effective ways to build and maintain internal applications.

And then there's the AI angle. The idea that ChatGPT "can't work with Access" is simply not true in practice. I use it every day. It writes SQL, it helps build and debug VBA, and it can assist with UI changes when you export form and report objects to text. If you know how to use the tools, AI becomes an enhancement to Access development, not a replacement for it. The limitation isn't the platform. It's whether the developer understands how to leverage it.

At the end of the day, articles like this tend to follow a familiar pattern. They highlight real challenges, frame them as problems with the platform, and then position a paid solution as the only way forward. But Access isn't broken. It doesn't need to be "rescued." In many cases, it just needs to be used correctly, maintained properly, and augmented with modern tools where appropriate. That's what a lot of us have been doing successfully for years.

LLAP
RR

P.S. Here's a copy of what I left in the comments form on that page. We'll see if they actually publish it:

This article mixes a valid point about AI-assisted migration with a very outdated and misleading characterization of Microsoft Access itself. Access isn't "just an old database" or a relic that needs to be replaced. It's a rapid application development platform that combines a relational database engine, UI framework, and business logic in a way that is incredibly effective for small and mid-sized business applications, and even in large enterprise solutions it's a great front end to an SQL Server solution. For many use cases, that tight integration is a feature, not a flaw. Calling it "monolithic" ignores the fact that Access has supported split front-end/back-end architectures, SQL Server backends, and scalable multi-user deployments for decades.

It's also simply incorrect to suggest that AI tools like ChatGPT can't meaningfully work with Access. I use ChatGPT with Access databases every day. It excels at writing and troubleshooting SQL, generating and refining VBA, and even assisting with UI changes. Access objects like forms and reports can be exported to text, modified, and re-imported, which makes them perfectly accessible to AI-driven workflows. If someone isn't aware that this is possible, they are not up to date on how modern Access development is actually being done.

The real issue described here isn't that Access is obsolete, it's that fully automated, one-click migrations to completely different architectures are inherently complex. That would be true for any platform, not just Access. Of course AI can't perfectly reconstruct an entire application from partial context. That's not a limitation of Access, it's a limitation of the migration approach. The conclusion that you need a proprietary paid tool to "fix" this problem says more about the author's knowledge than the technology.

And it's worth noting that criticism like this almost always comes from companies trying to sell a replacement platform. That perspective tends to ignore what Access is actually good at: rapid development, tight integration, and cost-effective solutions that work. Access doesn't need to be replaced in many cases. It needs to be understood, used correctly, and, where appropriate, enhanced with modern tools like AI.

That's exactly what many of us are already doing successfully every day.

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Microsoft Access Corrupt Database Recovery: Try These Fixes Before You Buy Recovery Software

So, you double-click your Access database and your heart skips a beat - up comes "Unrecognized database format," or maybe, just for fun, "Microsoft Access has detected that the database is in an inconsistent state." There's nothing quite like watching your mission-critical file suddenly refuse to open, display a message about repairs, or just flat-out crash. It's panic time, right? Not so fast. Before you consider spending a fortune on questionable recovery tools or calling in the professionals, let's walk through recovery steps that you can - and should - try first, all without spending a dime.

Getting hit by Access database corruption is common, but it doesn't mean all hope is lost. Knowing the exact signs and how to react can save hours of heartache. Let's dig in, take things step-by-step, and see how many databases we can bring back from the edge - often with just the built-in features and a bit of know-how.

First things first: what does Access corruption actually look like? Sometimes it's obvious - a database that won't open with ominous error messages, bizarre #Name? results in forms, or even tables showing mangled data. Other times, it's subtle: maybe a specific form crashes, or only one object seems off. Remember, corruption isn't just about wholesale failure - the database could be limping along, wounded internally. With experience, you'll recognize that only part of the file might be bad; sometimes it's just one object, table, index, or even a single rotten record.

Usually, the root cause of corruption isn't even Access itself. More often than not, network problems, unreliable Wi-Fi, synchronization services (OneDrive, Dropbox, Google Drive - you know who you are!), or sudden shutdowns are at fault. If your Access file lives anywhere but a local, wired drive, you're playing with fire. So after you recover, make sure you solve the environmental culprit, or else you'll just keep patching a leaky ship.

Before you do anything, back up your database - just as it is, corruption and all. Work on a copy, never the only version you've got. And, if your database sits on a network share or in the cloud, get it onto your local drive before any attempt at repair. Disconnect ALL users, make sure you've got enough disk space, and let's get started.

The quickest recovery wins start with the basics. Launch Access itself (don't just double-click the file), then hold the Shift key while opening the database to bypass any startup code. If you can get in, head straight to "Compact and Repair." You'd be surprised how many times that does the trick. If it doesn't, try the command-line version of compact and repair. And if you still have access to the VBA editor, a Debug > Compile can sometimes remedy corruption in your VBA project, since compiled code can go sideways too.

For databases with corrupted VBA code, there's a little-known superpower: decompile. This strips out the compiled state, forcing Access to rebuild everything from scratch. Simply put, this can fix situations where the source code is fine but the compiled layer is mucked up. After decompiling, always do a full compile in the VBA editor, fix any errors, and compact again before moving forward.

If all else fails, try this: create a new blank database and import all objects from your troubled file. Often, the main file is damaged but most of the objects are recoverable. If importing everything fails, do it one object type or even one object at a time. Time-consuming? Sometimes. But isolating that one rogue form, report, or module can make the difference. For especially stubborn cases, it might be faster to simply rebuild a broken object from scratch, rather than battle with it.

Let's say only your tables are still accessible. At this point, focus on rescuing your data: link to the broken tables from a new database, and copy the records out via queries or manual methods. If the process bombs out mid-way, narrow your attempt - import specific fields or groups of records, identifying and skipping the damaged chunk. Losing one record beats losing an entire table - think surgical extraction, not total amputation.

Sometimes the problem lies not in the data, but with indexes and relationships. Try removing these first if your tables won't transfer. Once your data is safe in a clean environment, rebuild your indexes and relationships from scratch. It's an extra step, but it beats total data loss.

Still can't copy the data directly? Get creative. Try exporting as Excel, CSV, or even to older MDB formats. Then import or link from scratch, or see if another version of Access can open the file. Oddly, importing everything into an MDB and re-converting to ACCDB sometimes rebuilds the file's internal metadata, breathing new life into your old data.

For the DIY crowd, if the graphical interface won't cooperate, you can use VBA - and database object libraries like DAO - to loop through tables, copying good records field by field and skipping over corrupt or problematic entries. This technique comes in handy when attachments, images, or long text fields are at the heart of your corruption woes.

And a quick side note: keep an eye on file size. Access has a two-gigabyte limit, but problems tend to pop up well before you hit that cap. If your backend is growing close to a gig, think about splitting it into multiple files. Trust me, wrangling a giant Access file is a recipe for headaches.

If you do need to look at recovery software, here's what you should know. Most third-party tools aren't magical - they'll scan your corrupt file, see what's salvageable, and let you export the results to a fresh database. Sometimes you'll get everything; sometimes only fragments; sometimes you're better off with your own hands-on approach. As for full-service professional recovery, there are trusted folks in the Access world, like Wayne Phillips at EverythingAccess.com, known for tackling the most stubborn cases.

Of course, all of this is just treatment. Prevention is way better than cure. Split your databases, keep each workstation's front end local, don't house Access files in sync folders, and absolutely steer clear of running Access over Wi-Fi. Keep Office and Windows updated, don't get lazy about backups (seriously, automate them daily and keep multiple generations), and always compact/rebuild your files regularly. Oh, and disable Name AutoCorrect for big, long-lived databases - it may sound helpful, but it can make things messier and even contribute to corruption over time.

Bottom line? Corruption in Access is inevitable if you use it long enough, but a calm approach, a disciplined recovery sequence, and good preventive habits will save your bacon almost every time. Most importantly, don't panic - never work on your only copy, and don't buy anything until you exhaust what Access gives you.

For more details - especially if you want step-by-step on things like the decompile command or using DAO code - watch the video above.

Live long and prosper,
RR

Monday, March 16, 2026

How to Use Comments & Notes in Microsoft Excel - Why Excel Has Two Comment Systems

Ever noticed those tiny colored triangles on the corner of a cell in your Excel sheet and wondered, "What exactly does that little thing mean?" Maybe you've hovered over the cell and a message box popped up - and then started wondering if it's a comment, a note, or whether Microsoft might just be messing with you on purpose. Let's demystify the whole thing right now, so you know what you're looking at and can decide which one to use (and avoid the Excel Bermuda Triangle of confusion).

First thing's first: Excel has two very similar - but also annoyingly different - features known as notes and comments. Understanding which is which can save you a ton of confusion, especially when collaborating with others or leaving reminders for yourself. Microsoft made things a little more complicated a few years ago by changing the names (because why not?), so let's clear up how each works, what they're for, and when to use which.

Back in Excel's glory days (or, as I like to call them, the "if it ain't broke, don't fix it" days), the only thing you needed to know were comments. These were simple pop-up text boxes - think sticky notes for your spreadsheet - that you'd attach to a cell. Hover over the cell, see the message, remember why you ever made a weird calculation there in the first place. Perfect for reminders, quick explanations, or "future-me, don't mess this up again" messages.

But of course, Microsoft decided to modernize things. Suddenly, old Comments became Notes, and a whole new threaded conversation feature was introduced as "Comments." Now, the old comments aren't comments - they're notes. And the new comments are, well, comments. Clear as mud? You're not alone if you're confused.

Here's the easy rule: Notes are the old-school yellow pop-up boxes - great for attaching quick reference information to a cell. There's no conversation, no replying, just a simple message. Use a note when you want a sticky note on your spreadsheet, be it a quick phone call detail, an explanation, or a cryptic memo that makes sense only to you and no one else ever again.

Comments, on the other hand, are built for collaboration. You'll see them as purple markers in the cell corner. You start a comment, and others can join the party by replying - think of it like a mini chat attached to your data. You can even @mention colleagues to grab their attention (assuming you're working online in a shared workbook with all the Microsoft 365 bells and whistles turned on). It's perfect if you're working with a team and want to clarify questions, flag issues, or enjoy the rare thrill of a cell-based debate.

Here's a quick visual cheat: a red marker means there's a note; a purple marker means there's a comment. Hover over the cell, and you'll see which flavor of extra info you've got.

To add a note, right-click the cell and choose New Note from the bottom of the context menu. Excel will pop up the note box, usually with your name at the top (you can erase that and replace it with something wittier if you'd like). Type your message, use bold formatting if needed, paste some text, and you're done - hovering over the cell will bring it up as a quick tip.

If you want to add a comment instead, right-click and pick New Comment. Enter your thoughts (or sarcastic digs at your coworkers), and if you're in a collaborative environment, others can reply. Use Control+Enter to post comments or replies. One neat feature here: you can mark comments as resolved once the discussion is over, making it easy to keep track of what's been handled and what still needs work. Great if you like using your comments as a kind of to-do list.

Important tip: you can only have one per cell - either a note or a comment, not both. If a cell already contains a note, you can't slap a comment on top. The menus will help you avoid this, but it's worth remembering before you go wild with your annotations.

A couple more quirks: notes and comments generally don't print alongside your data. They're meant as on-screen helpers, not as part of the official worksheet contents - so don't store anything vital in them unless you know you won't forget about it. And while notes and comments look similar, their underlying features (and behavior when converting between the two) are not always identical. If you ever decide to convert a batch of notes to comments (using the Convert to Comments option on the Notes menu), be careful and always back up your file first.

The Review tab up top gives you even more management tools: add comments or notes, jump to the previous/next one, show all open notes at once, or open the comments pane for a birds-eye view of all ongoing conversations. Resolved comments are especially handy for tracking progress through a review or cross-checking data with the rest of your team.

So when should you use notes, and when comments? Use notes for quick, personal, or reference messages - reminders, explanations, anything that's just for your context. Use comments when you're collaborating with others, need ongoing discussions, or want to take advantage of reply and resolve features. Personally, I stick with notes for myself (old habits die hard), but comments are invaluable in shared workbooks with lots of cooks in the kitchen.

One gotcha: it's not straightforward to export all your notes or comment threads from Excel, especially if you've got thousands of rows. If you're ever faced with a monster spreadsheet and want to move all those notes to, say, a database, it might take some special techniques (covered in more detail for my Silver Members in the extended video).

In short: just remember - old comments are now "notes," new "comments" are conversation threads. Notes = reference; comments = collaboration. And yes, Microsoft could have made this easier, but here we are.

For all the step-by-step visuals, and if you want the nitty-gritty walk-through (plus the bonus for members), check out the video embedded above.

Live long and prosper,
RR