>FYI: As mentioned in a previous message here dBase still exists. In 1999 Borland gave or sold the rights to dBase to dBase, Inc.
http://www.dbase2000.com>
>
>Kenn Leland/The Software Connection/Orange County California
And is doing very well in many uses. OpenOffice, for example, has a built in dBase capability. All you do to intialize it is to point it's ODBC connector to a folder. Then you can start creating, querying, populating tables in an MSAccess type environment. You can connect other backends via ODBC but dBase comes internally. Very nice.
JLK
Nebraska Dept of Revenue