No, HTML is not a programming language. It doesn't have the tools necessary to link to the database. You'll need something a little bit heavier, like PHP, ASP, JSP, or Ruby. (Or any of a billion others.)
You don't access HTML as such. You code it and run it. Open Notepad. Type in <html>hello</html>. Go to save, change the type to all. Name your page index.htm somewhere on your computer. Save it. Now go to the location and click on the webpage. You've just 'accessed' and coded HTML.
href is used in HTML to link from one website/webpage to another.
Remove the Anchor tag.
One can access the HTML head title by breaking apart the code of the website by using software like Java script or HTML scripts which can be downloaded on different websites pertaining to website and URL configuration tools.
Yes. Web servers are capable of storing all kinds of files for the internet.
You need to have the files in the same folder. Add this to HTML: <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href=".css">
Go to a university library. Libraries pay for databases so if you have a library card, you can have web access to these databases. See the Yale University link below.
ODBC / System DSN
Yes; you will need to use PHP or ASP to connect to your database and display its content in an HTML page.
http://www.businessintelligencelowdown.com/2007/02/top_10_largest_.html
You can make as many as you want, there is no license restriction with how many databases you can create with MS Access 2007.
click on html link
Access to the government databases.
2 GB, but the user can link tables in multiple databases together if a database over this limit is needed.
Database is used so that people can be able to access e-books, journals using Databases such as Ebcohost, Online Public Access Catalog (OPAC).
MS Access 2003 is able to produce MS Access 2000 compatible databases.
Microsoft Access is a relational database.