-</ol>
-<h2>Installation Steps (manuel, for advanced users, not
-recommended)</h2>
-<p><br />
-</p>
-<ol>
-<li>
-<h3>Creating the Database</h3>
-<ol>
-<li>NOTE : As FrontAccounting is still heavily under
-development, the database structure will ALWAYS change between
-releases, so if you have a database that you created for a previous
-release of FrontAccounting, it WILL NOT WORK after installing a new
-release. <br />Please look in the file <span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;">Update.html</span> for how to handle this. </li>
-<li>We strongly suggest using a GUI to manage your
-database(s) and database users. If you don’t have any, download <a href="http://www.phpmyadmin.net/"><strong>phpMyAdmin</strong></a>.
-</li>
-<li>Create a database with a name of your choice. The
-default in config_db.php is ‘<strong><em>frontacc</em></strong>’,
-but of course you can select whatever name you desire. </li>
-<li>Populate the database you have created. There are two
-scripts
-are provided to populate the database (both inside the folder /sql) :
-<ol>
-<li><strong><em>en_US-demo.sql</em></strong>.
-This has a minimal amount of demonstration data set up so that
-transactions can be tried to see how the system works. </li>
-<li><strong><em>en_US-new.sql</em></strong>.
-This script has
-only the basic data necessary to start a new company system off. If you
-wish to set up your company on FrontAccounting then this is the script
-to use. </li>
-</ol>
-</li>
-<li>Now that the database is created you will need to set
-up a database user to access this database. DO NOT USE THE USER ‘ROOT’.
-Set up a new user and give that user full privileges over the database
-‘frontacc’. </li>
-<li>After successfully install, remove or rename your
-install directory <strong><em>your_url/account/install</em></strong>
-(or
-whatever directory you entered) for safety reasons. You don't need it
-any more.</li>
-</ol>
-</li>
-<li>
-<h3>Editing config_db.php</h3>
-<ol>
-<li><strong><em>config_db.php</em></strong>
-contains connection information for the database. These must be set to
-your local settings or you will not be able to access FrontAccounting. </li>
-<li>FrontAccounting allows multiple connections, you can
-enter as many connections as you have separate entities (most people
-will use only one). </li>
-<li><strong>$db_connections</strong> is an
-array of connections – for each connection : </li>
-<li>“<strong>name</strong>” is the name of the
-connection, this is the name that will be displayed to the user </li>
-<li>“<strong>host</strong>” is the computer IP
-address or name where the database is. The default is localhost
-assuming that the web server is also the sql server. </li>
-<li>“<strong>dbuse</strong>r” is the user name
-under which the database should be accessed. NB, again, do not use the
-user ROOT. A user with appropriate privileges must be set up. </li>
-<li>“<strong>dbpassword</strong>” is the
-password for “dbuser”. You would have entered this when you created
-“dbuser”. </li>
-<li>“<strong>dbname</strong>” is the name of
-the database. The provided scripts use the name - frontaccount. </li>
-<li>“<strong>tbpref</strong>” is the table
-prefix for
-the tables. If you only have access to one database, you must use table
-prefix to separate the companies. Table prefix is set by a table prefix
-counter inside config_db.php, fi. 0_ for the first company.</li>
-</ol>
-</li>
-</ol>
-<h2> Logging In For the First Time</h2>