Hi Joe;
The PCI connectors on most motherboards are assigned a set of IRQ and data and memory address block. This is usually set through the bios of the system. If a specific memory address/IRQ is assigned to one of the PCI slots, which may be causing a conflict, by removing the device from that slot, then the conflict may go away. I've seen this with more than a few local bus 486 systems, where changing the order in which the cards are plugged into the motherboard would cause such a conflict that the system wouldn't even boot. I wouldn't be surprised if some PCI systems exhibit the same problem.
>I am not disagreeing...just curious...what would moving the video card do?
>
>Take care,
>Joe
>
>>Terry;
>>I'm also running VFP on an NT workstation 4 + sp3, which it's running well.
>>You may want to experiment with bios setting on your computer, if the bios has a virus protection set to enable, that may cause some problems.
>>Another thing you may try is (I'm assuming you're using a PCI video card) move the video card to another expantion slot.
>>
>>Hope this helps
>>
>>Kia Harirchian
>>K.H. Software Development Inc.
>>
>>
>>>I am having an increasingly frustrating problem with
>>>Dr. Watson - Access Denyed to VFP.EXE (error 0000005).
>>>
>>>It seems to be consistantly happening when I am in the
>>>debugger stepping - over, out of or closing methods in
>>>the forms.
>>>
>>>It is getting VERY annoying.
>>>
>>>I have installed the service packs - 3 on my NT Workstation
>>>and 2 on my VFP 5. I even reformatted my drive and
>>>started over but I can't get rid of it.
>>>
>>>HELP!!!
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