samrc
Posts: 2262
Joined: 5/19/2005
From: Florida, USA
Status: offline
|
I responded this way back in August, 2007 to someone else. And it WAS resolved! ----------- On the old GlobalSCAPE forum, I found a KW post about 429 error: "I went back thru the archives messages for this newsgroup, and on Dec 28, 2000 (yep almost 3 years ago) a user posted that they were getting the 429 error, and ultimately what fixed it was to uninstall and reinstall Trellix Web. " "Unfortuneatley it sounds like something is corrupt in the Active x section of Trellix - Melanie-at-Trellix " With Trellix, the problem was in the WEBGEMS, built in extras. Since CSB is built on that frame, the same fix COULD work for you. ------------ So.... You COULD try this: Make sure you have your publishing settings recorded somewhere, and write down your serial number (take a screen print of the HELP ABOUT screen in CSB) then you could 1) try to install CSB4 OVER your current CSB4 (to patch it). 2) if 1 does not work, try an uninstall, reboot, reinstall. But be warned, if you do that, your websites will be "fresh" and will need to re-publish all pages again because the program will have no memory of the publishing process. Note: The full uninstall/reinstall WORKED for that person. I expect it to work for you too. Let us know how it goes FYI, Trellix/CSB are not the only programs that get runtime error 429. Windows/Office products can get them too. It's usually traced to faulty automation sequence (a series of internal steps to complete a project often for converting data from one format to another). Can be faulty DLL (driver), or Active X handler is missing or corrupted. Sometimes those problems generate a familiar message of 'Run-time error '429': ActiveX component can't create object', etc. Again fix is complete uninstall/reinstall! (I also address this and other publishing errors here)
< Message edited by samrc -- 3/1/2009 1:27:25 PM >
_____________________________
-Samantha Visit Samisite.com for CSB Tutorials & WYSIWYG webmaster support. Try to live your life so that you wouldn't be afraid to sell the family parrot to the town gossip." Will Rogers (1879 - 1935)
|