They often have old versions of software because they are still supporting customers using them.Ħ. Find a small local computer store or repair business. There is almost certainly a geek or three with disks you could borrow.ĥ. There are often old disks "hiding" in dark corners of storage roomsģ. Ask at work if they have an installation CD you can borrow. So, you can borrow a CD without threatening their installation/activation.Ģ. Via the Product key you use to activate it. Unlike the very "old" DOS days when there was a signature file on the floppy, there is nothing unique on the CD to identify it. Find a friend (new or old) who has the right CD and is willing to lend you the CD.
then we can provide you with links to tools that may be able to extract the key for you. If you don't have the product key, as long as you have a HD that had it installed and activated on AND has not had Windows re-installed,
#Microsoft frontpage 2003 repair install
You need 2 things to install an office application, the generic installation disk / file and the unique 25 character Product Key. The current CD from the drive and insert the FP installation disk from an earlier version to prove that you have the right to do an "upgrade" installation. When installing Office using an "Upgrade" disk, you can install directly from the disk, ie 2003 or 2002 "upgrade", but at some point in the install process it will ask for "proof" of an "upgrade from" (or words to that effect) version. If you can't, does the 2000 disk have it? You are going to have to find an installation disk with FP2003 on it.