Microsoft makes a Basic mistake with Office 2007
#2
Posted 08 December 2006 - 05:28 PM
Microsoft Office will be swirling about at the same time as Vista. Users will be slow to adapt, if at all. While Apple will be innovating their brains out with new and sleek hard/software offerings.
#3
Posted 08 December 2006 - 05:28 PM
I have a nagging feeling that they believe that doing this, can allow Microsoft to claim to still be supporting the Mac with a version of Office, while at the same time effectively killing the Mac as a corporate machine.
This is a win-win situation for Microsoft when they look at the big picture.
It means that for every sale of a Mac version of Office they lose, they gain the sale of a copy of Windows as well as a copy of Office for Windows.
I'm pretty sure that could mean that they will eventually see no further justification in keeping the MBU running, as their flagship product is no longer selling well enough to justify the cost.
This may be a pessimistic view, but I wouldn't put it past Redmond to do this.
#4
Posted 08 December 2006 - 05:32 PM
#5
Posted 08 December 2006 - 05:32 PM
#6
Posted 08 December 2006 - 05:38 PM
#7
Posted 08 December 2006 - 05:44 PM
Running parallels in cohercy mode with Office 2007 is FASTER than running Office 2004....
I won't buy the next version of Office for the Mac... I'm buying the windows version and running it in Parallels Cohercy mode.... literally, windows apps run like they are in finder, at twice the speed of a rosetta emulated app.
#8
Posted 08 December 2006 - 05:47 PM
- All new mac runs Intel and you can either boot in Windows or buy parallele and have Excel or MS Office run on top of your Mac.
This is a win-win for both party. MS does not have to support the Mac Office version anymore while Mac user can still run MS Office.
If Apple release a better Office suite (Page is OK, Keynote is great) with a great spreadSheet, then people will switch to iSheet or whatever name.
That app needs to have Excel features but on steroids.
Example: I'd like to be able to download Stock Quotes automatically in a spreadsheet and have Stock Analysis function built it so I can create Graph.
If the App is Automator aware, then i just let you imagine what else can be done.
Connecting straight to Mysql, Oracle or other DB is also required.
I'm sure Apple is not sleeping, don't worry for them.
#9
Posted 08 December 2006 - 05:51 PM
It's not a win-win; it's a big win for Microsoft, and a lose for the OS X platform, as a key piece of software vanishes.
-rob.
#10
Posted 08 December 2006 - 05:54 PM
As a side note, I'd really like to see Apple put in some development hours on Wine. Would be great if they could somehow get the XP API layer running under OS X and break this Windows dependancy. Perhaps a top secret feature in Leopard? Would be nice... Steve says on stage, "Oh, and Leopard runs thousands of Windows XP software titles out of the box."
#11
Posted 08 December 2006 - 05:55 PM
For any Mac shop and home user, why spend all that money? If Apple pushes scriptability (and a spreadsheet, of course) in the next version of iWork, it will be a much cheaper solution.
#12
Posted 08 December 2006 - 05:57 PM
Considering that but a small percentage of Macs in the universe are Intel-powered, Parallels and Win Office won't be a valid answer for the majority for quite a while.
It's not a win-win; it's a big win for Microsoft, and a lose for the OS X platform, as a key piece of software vanishes.
-rob.
Well, there is also NeoOffice (http://www.neooffice.org) - it has Intel and PPC versions.. and it's free.
It is native application and runs under OS X without needing Linux/Fink.... we've been testing it and it works quite well... and you can bet that NeoOffice will be compatible with Office 2007 files before a version of Office comes our for Mac from Microsoft that is.
mike
#13
Posted 08 December 2006 - 06:00 PM
Microsoft is greedy, they are not going to walk away from millions in revenue... so as long as it sells well, they will sell something... albeit maybe a piece of $hit.... but they will sell something.
But on the flipside, they may look at it this way.... they kill Office for Mac... mac users have to buy windows office AND a windows OS to run it in parallels....hmmm
we are all screwed,
mike
#14
Posted 08 December 2006 - 06:07 PM
Responding to Rob's article,
Doesn't your article give Massachusetts Gov., more credence for wanting to move away from Windows by using OpenOffice?
If more States took the same approach wouldn't that change the entire argument?
and
After all the success by Apple I don't believe they would allow this to happen without a backup for the Mac, Windows & Linux OS's.
Peter



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