Both the other options mentioned so far sound good to me, but a couple
of things you might try under Windows 7 for KeyView or the converter
that Graham mentions are as follows.
AFAIK these approaches can be used for the installer .exe and any
installed .exe. Whether they will change anything is another matter, but
I have been quite surprised that even some low-level driver software
from my old Windows XP system function OK under Windows 7 with the right
compatibility settings.
If there is no installer, and the installed software is a DLL (the
converter Graham mentions is probably a .cnv file which is a DLL), I
don't know whether you can use this approach at all.
a. In Windows Explorer, select the relevant .exe (in the case of the
installed .exe, only possible when you have worked out what it is!
b. try right-click, Troubleshoot compatibility. If you do not see that
option it probably means that Windows already knows that it is a
compatible .exe
c. that may provide you with further info. But in any case, you can also
d. right-click, then Properties->Compatibility
e. select a suitable version of Windows (e.g. if your software worked
OK on XP, you could try that first).
f. apply the changes, then try running the software. You may also need
to run "As Administrator" - another right-click option that may be
available to you.
FWIW
a. the compatibility settings feature is also available on Win XP and
Vista. AFAIK the Troubleshoot option is new.
b. you may prefer to create a System Restore Point before doing the
installation (go into Control Panel, and use the search box in the top
right to lok for System Restore). Windows 7 will probably create one
anyway, but I like to do my own.
Peter Jamieson
http://tips.pjmsn.me.uk