>Ed
>
>> Try looking in the registry; if it's installed, there will be a registry
>key for the ProgID
Outlook.Application >under
>HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Outlook.Application; this will point at a
CLSID;
>locate the registry key >HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\
the CLSID you found
>under the ProgID; it will have a LocalServer32 >subkey; the default
>value is the actual full path to start Outlook.
>>
>
>Thanks for the info - this seems to work - presumably I can use this method
>for all Windows 32-bit O/S ie 2000, NT, 98 and 95 ?
>
Yes.