IN THE SPOTLIGHT: MDE to MDB Conversion Service
(also supports: ACCDE to ACCDB, ADE to ADP, etc)
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Access Database Repair Service
An in-depth repair service for corrupt Microsoft Access files
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: vbWatchdog
VBA error handling just got easier...
" vbWatchdog is off the chart. It solves a long standing problem of how to consolidate error handling into one global location and avoid repetitious code within applications. "
- Joe Anderson,
Microsoft Access MVP
Meet Shady, the vbWatchdog mascot watching over your VBA code →
(courtesy of Crystal Long, Microsoft Access MVP)
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: vbMAPI
An Outlook / MAPI code library for VBA, .NET and C# projects
Get emails out to your customers reliably, and without hassle, every single time.
Use vbMAPI alongside Microsoft Outlook to add professional emailing capabilities to your projects.
IN THE SPOTLIGHT: Code Protector
Standard compilation to MDE/ACCDE format is flawed and reversible.
Michael Scofield’s tattoo is arguably the most famous prop in modern television history. It was a masterpiece of makeup application. In the early seasons, applying the full tattoo to Wentworth Miller took approximately four to five hours, and removal took another two hours. As the series progressed, the producers utilized longer-lasting "transfer" tattoos to save time, though they still required significant maintenance.
Characters die, return, or switch allegiances so often that emotional stakes blur. T-Bag’s survival alone defies logic multiple times. By Season 5 (the revival), the show relies on nostalgia more than coherent storytelling.
The show begins with a simple, high-stakes hook: Lincoln Burrows (Dominic Purcell) is wrongfully convicted of a crime he didn't commit and is sitting on death row. His brother, structural engineer Michael Scofield (Wentworth Miller), believes in his innocence but has exhausted all legal avenues. In a desperate gambit, Michael gets himself incarcerated in the same prison, Fox River State Penitentiary, with the blueprints of the prison hidden in a full-body tattoo. prison break episodes
The second season, consisting of 22 episodes, picks up where the first season left off, with Michael and Lincoln on the run after their daring escape from Fox River. The brothers, along with their fellow escapees, must evade the law and navigate the complexities of life on the outside.
After the escape, episodes shift from prison drama to manhunt thriller. “Otis” (S2E3) and “Bolshoi Booze” (S2E6) are standout examples of how the show reinvents itself without losing momentum. Michael Scofield’s tattoo is arguably the most famous
“The Company” (the shadowy organization behind Lincoln’s framing) becomes a narrative black hole. Instead of tightening the plot, episodes start introducing secret agents, microchips, and convoluted betrayals. Season 4’s “self-contained” episodes (hunting for Scylla) lose the primal urgency of Season 1.
As the season progresses, the stakes grow higher, and the characters are forced to confront their past mistakes. The season culminates in a dramatic finale, as Michael and his allies face off against their enemies in a desperate bid for survival. By Season 5 (the revival), the show relies
Even minor characters (C-Note, Sucre, Abruzzi) get memorable arcs.
As the season progresses, the stakes grow higher, and the characters face numerous challenges, including internal conflicts and external threats. The season culminates in a thrilling finale, as Michael and his allies face off against their enemies in a desperate bid for survival.
By Season 3, the writers faced a problem: how to put the genie back in the bottle? The solution was Sona Federal Penitentiary, a lawless prison in Panama run by the inmates while the guards watched from the perimeter.
Early episodes (Season 1, episodes 1–13 especially) are a clinic in suspense. Each episode ends on a cliffhanger—a guard rounding a corner, a missing screw, a dropped tool—that makes binging almost mandatory. The pacing is relentless but never sloppy.