
I then replaced the original 16-bit setup.exe, located in the disk1 folder, with InstallShield's 32-bit version of setup.exe (download this file from the site referenced in the above link). First I extracted the installation program contents (changed the extension from. The issue was that the setup.exe program used by InstallShield 5.X is 16-bit. In my case, the installation program was InstallShield 5.X. There are ways to modify a 16-bit installation program to make it 32-bit so it will install on 64-bit Windows 7. If the program itself is 32-bit, and just the installer is 16-bit, here's your answer. You don't need to install a virtual environment running a 32-bit version of Windows to run a program with a 16-bit installer on 64-bit Windows. If the installation does not start automatically, double-click the setup executable file in the folder where the installation files are located.It took me months of googling to find a solution for this issue.README.htm-An overview document that introduces Crystal Ball, describes how to display the latest Crystal Ball README (release notes) file on Oracle Technology Network, and lists third party license and copyright informationĪ bit-specific setup executable file-The setup launcher for Crystal Ball


License Key Request Process.html-The Oracle Crystal Ball License Key Request Process, which describes how to obtain and activate a Crystal Ball license code for use after the initial time-limited trial license expires To display that page, see Checking the README File. html format before installing Crystal Ball, you can download it from the Deployment page of the EPM Documentation Library on Oracle Technology Network.

The CD or the folder where you unzipped a downloaded Crystal Ball installation file (the installation source folder) contains these files:Ĭrystal Ball Installation Guide.pdf-The Oracle Crystal Ball Installation and Licensing Guide in Adobe Acrobat.
