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dami....@gmail.com

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Nov 7, 2007, 11:34:00 AM11/7/07
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I am trying to install htmlhelp.exe, from

http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?familyid=00535334-c8a6-452f-9aa0-d597d16580cc&displaylang=en

I get an error as - not a valid Win32 application.
Anyone seen this? Help, anyone???

MattP

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Nov 8, 2007, 11:53:32 AM11/8/07
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On 7 Nov, 16:34, dami.gu...@gmail.com wrote:
> I am trying to install htmlhelp.exe, from
>
> http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?familyid=00535334-c8a...

>
> I get an error as - not a valid Win32 application.
> Anyone seen this? Help, anyone???

Hi

For what it's worth, the only time I have seen a message like this was
when I tried to install an Access 2007 runtime onto a Windows 2000
workstation.
It didn't like the operating system (Access 2007 needs to be on XP or
above), but the message it gave was the same as yours.

Maybe the htmlhelp you are trying to install is for a different
operating system?

Hope this helps.

Cheers,

Matt

Rob Chandler [MVP]

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Nov 13, 2007, 8:32:54 AM11/13/07
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On Nov 8, 3:34 am, dami.gu...@gmail.com wrote:
> I am trying to install htmlhelp.exe, from
>
> http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?familyid=00535334-c8a...

>
> I get an error as - not a valid Win32 application.
> Anyone seen this? Help, anyone???

This sounds like the downloadis corrupted or a bad copy is cached on
your providers server.
Try Downloading again.
Try getting a friend to download from another service provider.

Rob
MS Help MVP
http://helpwar.net/FAR

MattP

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Jan 24, 2008, 4:53:36 PM1/24/08
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It consists in knowing that there is an
unconquerable opposition between us and God, and that without a mediator
there can be no communion with Him.

471. It is unjust that men should attach themselves to me, even though they
do it with pleasure and voluntarily. I should deceive those in whom I had
created this desire; for I am not the end of any, and I have not the
wherewithal to satisfy them. Am I not about to die? And thus the object of
their attachment will die. Therefore, as I would be blamable in causing a
falsehood to be believed, though I should employ gentle persuasion, though
it should be believed with pleasure, and though it should give me pleasure;
even so I am blamable in making myself loved and if I attract persons to
attach themselves to me. I ought to warn those who are ready to consent to a
lie that they ought not to believe it, whatever advantage comes to me from
it; and likewise that they ought not to attach themselves to me; for they
ought to spend their life and their care in pleasing God, or in seeking Him.

472. Self-will will never be satisfied, though it should have command of all
it would; but we are satisfied from the mom


dami....@gmail.com

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Jan 24, 2008, 3:58:47 PM1/24/08
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being called gentlemen, and prove themselves
true plebeians in order to be thought worthy of great office.

306. As duchies, kingships, and magistracies are real and necessary, because
might rules all, they exist everywhere and always. But since only caprice
makes such and such a one a ruler, the principle is not constant, but
subject to variation, etc.

307. The chancellor is grave and clothed with ornaments, for his position is
unreal. Not so the king; he has power and has nothing to do with the
imagination. Judges, physicians, etc., appeal only to the imagination.

308. The habit of seeing kings accompanied by guards, drums, officers, and
all the paraphernalia which mechanically inspire respect and awe, makes
their countenance, when sometimes seen alone without these accompaniments,
impress respect and awe on their subjects; because we cannot separate in
thought their persons from the surroundings with which we see them usually
joined. And the world, which knows not that this effect is the result of
habit, believes that it arises by a natural force, whence come these words,
"The character of Divinity is stamped on his countenance," etc.

309. Justice.--As custom determines what is agreeable, so also does it
determine justice.

310. King and tyrant.--I, too, will keep my thoughts secret.

I will take care on every journey.

Greatness of establishment, respect for establis


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