Week in Review: December 13, 2025
Highlights include using Twilio to text from Access, adding block comment/uncomment buttons to the VBA toolbar, and using internet time services to secure trial periods.
Just Published
This section includes videos, articles, and (occasionally) open-source project updates from the past 7 days.
Articles
*Article descriptions generated by Claude-Sonnet-4.5.
- Jonathan Halder (Access JumpStart 2.0)
- How to cripple Microsoft Access: A tongue-in-cheek guide exploring common mistakes that slow down or break Access databases, including network latency issues, missing indexes, and inefficient coding practices.
- Colin Riddington (Isladogs on Access)
- System Date Time Check: VBA code to verify system date/time against internet time sources, useful for protecting data integrity and securing time-limited trial applications.
- Mike Wolfe (NoLongerSet)
- Throwback Thursday: December 11, 2025: A weekly feature highlighting past articles about valuing Access development skills and building a profitable consulting career.
Videos
-
Access User Group Recordings (YouTube channel)
- Using Twilio for texting from Access (53:24): with Adolph Dupré
- SQL Server Academy with Access Part 3 (01:11:13): with Juan Soto
-
Karl Donaubauer (YouTube channel)
- Access DevCon 2025 - VBE_Extras (50:16): with John Mallinson
-
Richard Rost (YouTube channel)
- Quick Queries #70 (21:44): Why AI is Becoming The Junior Developer You Never Knew You Needed in Microsoft Access
- Group Totals (20:06): How To Calculate Group Totals on a Form in Microsoft Access (Fitness #65)
- Quantity Box (14:19): How To Add a Quantity Box for Faster Data Entry in Microsoft Access (Fitness #64)
- Comment Block (06:39): How To Add Comment Block & Uncomment Block Buttons to the Microsoft Access VBA Editor
- Duplicate (18:07): Detect But Allow Duplicate Check Numbers
-
David Britz [David's Database and Coding Channel] (YouTube channel)
- Access Youtube Episode 10A (25:06)
New to Me
This section includes content I discovered this week that has been around for a while.
- Nothing new this week.
Upcoming Access User Group Events
NOTE: Only English-language user group meetings with scheduled guest speakers or topics are listed. For a complete list of upcoming events, visit the Access User Group event calendar. Not all links below include the start time and time zone. For that information, check out this handy reference guide from Access MVP Maria Barnes over at AccessForever.org: Access User Groups 2025.
- [January 7, 2026] Neil Sargent: Spot the Difference – New Style MsgBox for Access
- [February 04, 2026] Aleksander Wojtasz: Creating an Advanced Data Grid Integrated with Access
- [March 04, 2026] Chris Arnold: Using Disconnected (In-Memory) ADO Recordsets in Access
- [April 1, 2026] Peter Cole: Using vbWatchdog with Access (JUST ADDED)
- [May 6, 2026] Tim Finch: Grid Lanes (NEW DATE)
- [June 3, 2026] Kevin Bell: SQL Server Tips and Tricks for Access Developers
- [September 2, 2026] John Mallinson: Working with the Windows API (JUST ADDED)
Access Roadmap
There were no changes made to the roadmap between the Week in Review last week (2025-12-06) and this week (2025-12-13).
The roadmap was last updated October 15, 2025.
Listed below is a snapshot of the official Access Roadmap.
"In Development", "Rolling Out", and "Launched" are Microsoft terms that I pulled straight from the public roadmap. Dates listed are "rollout start" dates.
In Development
OCT 2025: Add zoom slider magnification to Microsoft Access: Access will add magnification slider (10% to 500%) in lower right of the application, similar to the feature in Word, PowerPoint, and Excel. It will also be keyboard accessible and available on the ribbon.DEC 2025: Modernize Access Forms and Reports to work well on Large Format Monitors: Remove the 22-inch size limit and modernize Access forms and reports work well on large format monitors and provide responsive behavior for different form factors.
Rolling Out
None listed.
Launched
None listed.
Development Priorities
"Development Priorities" do not appear on the Access Roadmap. Instead, they get updated from time to time in official Access blog posts or Access engineering team presentations. I'll include a link to the source of the current development priorities as they get updated.
The items listed below reflect Microsoft's order of priority and were published in the following Access Forever article, Microsoft's Plans for Access Oct '25 – March '26.
- Continued focus on monthly issue fixes, security, customer-reported bugs, etc. to improve product quality, security, reliability, and relevance. Most of our engineering hours are spent here.
- Large monitor support: Remove 22” limitation to support using Access on modern hardware.
- Large monitor support: Enable zoom slider magnification for forms.
- Large monitor support: Modernize forms to work well on large monitors.
- Time allowing, we’ll continue to work on remaining large monitor support features (support zoom in reports and design layout, automatic zooming, support multiple monitor scenarios).
- If we still have time left over in the semester, we will begin work on Git integration for source code management in Access. (Spec is in progress. We will likely roll this out in phases also beginning the second half of 2026.)
Special thanks to Karl Donaubauer for posting the updated priorities at AccessForever.org.
Upcoming End-of-Life Dates
Here are the key end-of-life dates Access developers should track:
2024
SQL Server 2014[JUL 09]
2025
Access 2016 | Access 2019 | Office 2016 | Office 2019[OCT 14]Windows 10[OCT 14]Salesforce ODBC Driver[OCT 28]Windows 11 version 23H2[NOV 11]
2026
[APR 01]Auto-migration of Classic Outlook begins for Enterprise users[JUL 14]SQL Server 2016[OCT 13]Access 2021 | Office 2021[OCT 13]Windows 11 version 24H2
2027
[JAN 12]Windows Server 2016[OCT 12]SQL Server 2017
2029
[JAN 09]Windows Server 2019[OCT 09]Access 2024 | Outlook 2024[OCT 09(or later)]Classic Outlook- See "Edit 8/12/2024" at top of this article for official clarification that "both perpetual and subscription [i.e., MS 365] versions of Outlook will be supported until 2029"
- Support for Classic Outlook is guaranteed at least through 9 Oct 2029; it may be extended beyond this date
2030
[JAN 08]SQL Server 2019
2031
[OCT 14]Windows Server 2022
2033
[JAN 11]SQL Server 2022
2034
[OCT 10]Windows Server 2025
Ongoing
- Microsoft 365 (with subscription)
Date TBD
- Complete removal of VBScript from Windows OS (Microsoft Announces the Death of VBScript)