At 1/14/2009 03:40 PM Wednesday, Ehren Benson wrote:
>Any new installs are getting 2007, people with 2003/XP are getting
>upgraded as they request it.
Pretty much the same here in Psychology. If I do the install, then I
also immediately change the default file format for Word, Excel, and
Powerpoint to the 1997 format, otherwise we have compatibility
issues. Unfortunately, those settings only apply to the current
login account, so if the user makes a new account then they will be
back to the 2007 format. I wish I knew how to make that a global change.
I had read a report that users experienced with the earlier Office at
first hate Office 2007, but after a giving it week or two come to
really prefer it. I always tell that to my users, and so far they
agree. Many features have been moved to unexpected places, but after
awhile people see that they have been moved to where they should have
been in the first place. Office 2007 also does much better with live
previews of changes you are about to make. OTOH, I am a keyboard
snob, and I am not sure that Office 2007 provides a rich enough set
of keyboard methods
[As for me, I still use Word 2.0 for Windows 3.1 (from 1992), and I
am slowly migrating to Excel 2000 from Excel 4.0 for Windows 3.1
(again from 1992) just because Excel 4 does not have tabbed
sheets. And I have all this working under Vista (plus some old DOS
apps that I refuse to give up).]
-- dkm
>Ehren J. Benson, MCSE
>Windows Systems Administrator
>
>[log in to unmask]
>517-884-5469
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: MSU Network Administrators Group [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
>On Behalf Of Cheryl Akers
>Sent: Wednesday, January 14, 2009 3:31 PM
>To: [log in to unmask]
>Subject: [MSUNAG] Office 2003 or 2007?
>
>We're in the middle of deciding of we need to upgrade.
>
>Our department is still on Office 2003. Are you all upgrading to 2007 or
>are you still on 2003?
>Cheryl
>
>Cheryl Akers, MS, CNA - [log in to unmask]
>Microcomputer Support - Microbiology and Molecular Genetics
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