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When a user who does not have the Microsoft Office 2003 Web Components installed on their computer accesses a Web page that contains an Office 2003 Web Component, he or she may receive a message that is similar to the following:
If the Web page is on your intranet or on the Internet, you may have to manually modify the download location that is specified by the Click here to install the Office 2003 Web Components link. This article contains the methods to modify this information for computers that have to install the Office 2003 Web Components over an intranet and also over the Internet.
Note - To use HTML documents that contain the Office Spreadsheet, Office PivotTable, or Office Chart components, you must have Microsoft Internet Explorer version 4.01 or later. To browse a data access page that was created by using Microsoft Office Access 2003, you must have Microsoft Internet Explorer version 5 or later.
By default, when you publish a Web page, the link to install the Office Web Components points to the location where you originally installed Office 2003. If the Office installation location was a network server that is accessible by all users in your organization, you may not have to make any modifications to your Web pages. However, if you want to you can set up your Web pages so that the link to install the Office 2003 Web Components points to any server on your network.
To specify the download location for the Office 2003 Web Components Setup program, you must define the Setup location when you design the component and before you save the Web page. To do this, follow these steps for the Office program that you are using to publish your Web pages.
Note – You can specify either a file URL or an HTTP URL in these steps.
When you insert one of the Office Web Components in a Web page, the path for the Web Components installer is automatically added. You can change this path by using the following steps, but this only changes the path on the active page. If you want to change the path for any page that you insert one of the Office Web Components into, follow the steps in the "Microsoft Office Excel 2003" section earlier in this article, or modify the registry information in the "Related Registry Information" section later in this article.
In the Location box, type the path of the Office 2003 share point.
For example, if you specify http://server/Officexp in the Location box, the path http://server/Officexp/Files/OWC/Setup.exe is written in the Web page.
By default, if a user does not have Office 2003, Access 2003, Excel 2003, or FrontPage 2003 installed on their computer, and the user installs the Office Web Components, the user receives a Run–time Static license for the Office 2003 Web Components. This means that the user can view the controls on a Web page but cannot interact with the controls.
Organizations that own an Enterprise, Select, or Maintenance Agreement for Office 2003 and that plan to deploy Office 2003 in phases can permit early adopters of Office 2003 to share component–based Web pages with users who have not yet installed Office 2003. To do this, follow these steps to use the licensing mechanism that is supported by Internet Explorer:
Extract the files to your Lpk folder.
Note During the extraction process, the Lpk_tool.exe files are copied to the Lpktool subfolder in your Lpk folder.
<OBJECT CLASSID = "clsid:5220cb21–c88d–11cf–b347–00aa00a28331"> <PARAM NAME="LPKPath" VALUE="license.lpk"> </OBJECT>
Note The only text that you have to modify from the example is the name of the .lpk license file. The example uses License.lpk. Replace License.lpk with the path and name of the .lpk file that you created. Keep the Name property of the <PARAM> tag as "LPKPath", and set the Value property for the <PARAM> tag of the License Manager object to the LPK file name and path. This path may be a relative path but must not refer to a UNC share or to a URL on another domain.
For example, assume that the HTML file is located on \\server\share\myPage.html, and assume that the license file is located one level deeper, on \\server\share\LPK\License.lpk. In this scenario, the HTML code will be as follows:
<OBJECT CLASSID = "clsid:5220cb21–c88d–11cf–b347–00aa00a28331"> <PARAM NAME="LPKPath" VALUE="LPK\License.lpk"> </OBJECT>
For additional information about how to use licensed ActiveX controls, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
159923 – HOWTO: Use Licensed ActiveX Controls in Internet Explorer
When a user who has the Office Web Components but not Office locates a Web page with an Office 2003 Web Component, the user can interact with the Office Web Component because of the license on the Web server.
For more information about licensing Microsoft ActiveX controls, visit the following Microsoft Web page:
For additional information about licensing considerations for the Office XP Web Components, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
288729 – OFFXP: General Information About Licensing and Using Office XP Web Components
By default, when you publish a Web page, the link to install the Office Web Components points to the location where you originally installed Office 2003. Therefore, if a user browses to your Web page but does not have the Office 2003 Web Components installed, the user cannot install the Office 2003 Web Components from your installation source.
To download the Office 2003 Web Components, visit the following Microsoft Download Center Web site:
You can modify your Web pages to reference this location for the installation of the Office 2003 Web Components.
To specify the Tools on the Web download location for the Office 2003 Web Components Setup program, you must define the location when you design the component and before you save the Web page. To do this, follow these steps for the Office program that you use to publish your Web pages.
When you insert one of the Office Web Components in a Web page, the path for the Web Components installer is automatically added. You can change this path by using the following steps, but this only changes the path on the active page. If you want to change the path for any page that you insert one of the Office Web Components into, follow the steps in the "Microsoft Office Excel 2003" section earlier in this article, or modify the registry information in the "Related Registry Information" section later in this article.
By default, if a user does not have Office 2003, Access 2003, Excel 2003, or FrontPage 2003 installed on their computer, and the user installs the Office Web Components, the user receives a Run–time Static license for the Office 2003 Web Components. This means that the user can view the controls on a Web page but cannot interact with the controls. This includes the Office Web Components that are downloaded from the Tools on the Web site.
When you install Office 2003, the location that is used to install the Office 2003 Web Components is written in the registry at the following location:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Office\11.0\Common\Internet
Value Name: LocationOfComponents
Value Type: String (REG_SZ)
Value Data: Text string pointing to original install point
If you modify the location by using one of the methods listed earlier in this article, the path that is specified for the LocationOfComponents string value changes accordingly.
Microsoft Knowledge Base Article – 828950
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