Microsoft Office 2013 Not Compatible With Windows XP, Vista
hypnosec writes "The newly unveiled productivity suite from Microsoft, Office 2013, won't be running on older operating systems like Windows XP and Vista it has been revealed. Office 2013 is said to be only compatible with PCs, laptops or tablets that are running on the latest version of Windows i.e. either Windows 7 or not yet released Windows 8. According to a systems requirements page for Microsoft for Office 2013 customer preview, the Office 2010 successor is only compatible with Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows Server 2008 R2 or Windows Server 2012. This was confirmed by a Microsoft spokesperson. Further the minimum requirements states that systems need to be equipped with at least a 1 GHz processor and should have 1 GB of RAM for 32-bit systems or 2 GB for 64-bit hardware. The minimum storage space that should be available is 3 GB along with a DirectX 10-compatible graphics card for users wanting hardware acceleration."
Good. XP needs to be wiped out.
2 gig of RAM to type a letter
------
beware he who would deny you access to information, for in his mind he dreams himself your master
I don't see a problem with this. If they made it only for Windows 8, then I'd be pissed, but this is fine.
Damn M$, you're really trying to make people love Windows 8.
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Reminds me of the Weird Al video with the surgeon carefully extracting money from his patient on the operating room table.
Isn't that the amount of RAM that comes with their new tablet? If so, I wonder why they picked that number......
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Let me get this straight. Microsoft, with 93 thousand employees can't manage to make their main software product compatible with previous versions of its operating system, while the Document Foundation with, um, zero employees can? Did I get that straight?
When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
You think they might have learned from the last few times they ruined their own monopolistic position, but no, apparently not.
I moved to Open Office a while ago and never looked back. Bloody stupid Office ribbons and xxxX files types. Only use it for job and they pay for it, so no skin off my nose.
Seems most corporates skip every alternate version and I'd suggest for the most part this is will be bypassed as well
Mainly cosmestic upgrades although a few things like better PDF handling and better BI integration are nice even if not must haves - they just ease the input not the actual operations.
Smartest thing Microsft could do is open up the file formats a little more and throw some improved compression algorithms at the file format - currently it is a fairly poor (speed oriented) ZIP implementation ... Smaller, easier to distribute files would at least be a compelling reason to upgrade for me (and other I presume) and a new file format will force upgrades.
My 2 cents worth ...
From all indications, Office 2013 is just more metro UI devolution insanity from Microsoft.
Corporate IT will not have a problem skipping this upgrade cycle, and will be richer for it. No upgraded licenses to pay for to Microsoft, no new training required for users, and everybody is happier (except for the Microsoft people, of course).
It's going to come out very near the EOL for XP, nobody uses Vista (especially nobody who's going to actually upgrade Office from whatever came on their PC), and you can't find a PC with Windows 7 that has less than 1-2 GB of RAM.
Plus, it's not like you can't get your hands on the last, what, five versions of Office or so? I'm still running Office 2003 on Windows 7 because I haven't felt like buying the upgrade. I could still run that on Windows 2000 if I wanted to.
Precisely why would Microsoft Office need DirectX? a 3D spreadsheet maybe? Maybe a really awesome animated book report?
Fine, have neither XP nor Vista. No mention of Ubuntu 12.04... meaning that's compatible probably?
Slashdot, fix the reply notifications... You won't get away with it...
Vista not being compatible is suprising to me, but XP support being dropped is acceptable. Who still running XP would actually be paying for Office 2013?
Newer applications are going to want to leverage features found in the newer operating systems.
Most OS X programs require Tiger from 2005, or at least Jaguar from 2002. Quite a few already require at least Leopard from 2007.
I thought the kernel for Vista was very similar to that used in windows 7 [url]{http://www.pcworld.com/article/153624/under_the_hood_windows_7_is_vistas_twin.html}[/url]. so why wouldn't Office 2013 not work in Vista; this seems strange to me. Does anyone have a thought as why this is the case? Not that Vista is some great OS or anything it just seems weird.
I can see why they'd drop support for XP, being that it's 11 years old now and that it's been succeeded by 3 versions now? But Vista? Really? Vista and 7 are very, very similar. They even back ported some of the 7 stuff to Vista around the time 7 was released with the "platform update". This is a marketing reason, not a technical reason
I am a little bit surprised that Vista will not be supported. I expect Vista just never had the market penetration to be worth the aggravation.
But really, who cares? Open Office (actually I prefer Libre Office since 3.5 came out) does everything I need, and everything everyone else I know needs. The only reason for Microsoft Office is cross compatibility with other MS Office users but it has been a few years since Open Office failed me in that regard. And even then, the sender did not actually need anything that Open Office didn't do. They used MS Office "just because."
It was paid for by my company.
Never saw any reason to upgrade to Office 2010, much less Office 2013.
Office 2007 SP3 does its job well.
And I'm not particularly pleased about the recent emphasis on Metro, social and the cloud. I just want a simple productivity suite that allows me to work.
I can foresee myself using Office 2007 for the next ten years, until Microsoft becomes as irrelevant as Kodak or IBM.
VIM: Supported by !windows and simply requires a kernel. It wont use any amount of RAM you throw at it and will never report you to its big brother. Very Impressive Move to get Off Ice and get clean.
I'd suggest that people run a more modern operating system than Win XP, but LibreOffice will even run on Windows 2000!
LibreOffice system requirements:
coding is life
There are even software vendors that drop official support for Vista but keep XP support. Adobe Photoshop CS6 for example. In most case there is nothing stopping the software from running on Vista but the vendor don't want the additional support costs.
Office 2010 is compatible with XP. I have it installed. XP is mentioned here. Maybe they're talking about certain features? And as for 2013, will it fail to install on an older OS?
I also agree with Microsoft's drive to do everything they can to invalidate and kill Vista.
*Note - this post's chronometer may be inaccurate to a degree of + or - 5 years.
It turns out that is not even patched nor supported either and businesses have no idea and still run it.
One part of me says businesses will simply not use it and it will fail. The other side thinks it is about time they moved on and we stopped catering to decade old technology and could see some progress. Web developers would be thrilled and could offer gradients and cool animations reserved only for the IPhone if we didn't cateer to ancient versions of IE anymore.
http://saveie6.com/
Vista is over 5 years old. That is ancient in computer terms. XP changed our perception recently and was the oddball. Vista does not offer DirectX11 GPU nor the DRM and document protection of Windows 7 for the sharing features of Sky Drive Pro. (Sky Drive Pro is a rumor at this point from screenshots but many theorize it supports groups and what can be moved to the cloud).
http://saveie6.com/
Sorry. I missed the word "successor" after the word "2010". First part of my comment withdrawn.
I, on the other hand, will be using only spotted owl feather quills and writing with ink made from the blood of baby pandas. It is more expensive, but the medium is, as you know, the message.
Apple's iWork already limits you to the latest OS. While everyone is going into a frothy rage over Microsoft putting OS limitations on Office, the Apple fanbois are all ready to buy the next OSX and next iWork as soon as it comes out.
“Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
It's not like Vista has been standing still over those years. Throw the latest service pack on and it has the same code base (effectively) as Windows 7.
If there are truly some features that Windows 7 has that haven't been back-ported to Vista (like perhaps the that document protection stuff you mentioned), then sure, maybe just have that functionality unavailable when running on Vista. But you can't tell me with a straight face that the ENTER of Office 2013 is incompatible with Vista.
Most people on Slashdot are fucking idiots.
My company has used OpenOffice/StarOffice for a decade. Everyone I know uses OpenOffice or LibreOffice. And, usually, that's just to read shitty fucking documents that marketing or HR fucktards have drawn up. I do 99% of all my word-processing type of work in a simple text editor on Windows, the simple Bean text editor on OSX, and vi on Linux and Solaris.
All of these are simple, work everywhere, and are free. Oh, and they take up like jack shit for resources.
iWorks is not the problem !! The incompatibility lies with the obsolete OSes !! With Office 2013, the incompatibility lies with Office, not the OSes !!
There !! Fixed that for you !!
Sent from my motherfucking iPad you sorry ass loser you !!
It's not about the cost of RAM it's about the fact that none of the other options need anywhere near as much RAM. Why should people have to shell out for RAM because MS can't figure out how to optimize its code? A good program will only use more RAM when it's needed. How many hundreds of copies of a single document do you think is reasonable for Office to cache?
Why would they go there with vista/win2k8? Seems excessive considering new version is only incrementally better than Office 2010.
What realistically is the value prop to the end-user to upgrade? Being annoyed with ugly ass metro styling and "cloud" shit?
Sounds like a good way to loose out on office revenue.
Unbelieveable.
Printing "1 gig of RAM for a 32 bit machine and 2 gigs for 64" is common.
This does not say Office will require 1 gig for itself, no, it says what your machine needs to run good with it. For a recent machine that can run a modern version of anything, those requirments are pretty typical for anything. I bet if you wanted to run some lame, old game in Dosbox, you'd need 1 GB for a Win32- and 2 GB for a Win64 machine.
Everyone who replied in the same manner as the parent in this "lol" thread should feel ashamed.
Welcome to the more intense forced migration by MS after their unexpectedly well made and uncharacteristically blunder-free XP release that they are having trouble killing.The fact that customers haven't felt the desperate or willingness to take a leap of faith to escape is a rare compliment to the engineers and shows that underneath the out of touch managers, and brain dead Uncle Fester CEO there is actually some real talent, but against actually empowering those people with every release is against the core principle of overpromising and under delivering which has sold billions of PCs and is the devil's pact that binds OEM to MS in way where neither has to explain why your new PC kind of sucks, and always promises a bright future with distant upgrades at which point most people just replace their PC and the cycle starts over again. Meanwhile MS would do just fine if they let the smart people they hire run the show, instead of Bean Counter Ballmer who is the epitome of the guys who is willing to knowingly ship crap, because unlike anybody with a brain who has dealt with the smart people MS often hires, he honestly can't imagine that shipping consistant decent software is possible and might even redeem the image of his company. People like Ballmer think they just because they have not an ounce of innovation or foresight, that new concepts are just flukes and pixie dust to be kept locked away and dolled out only in case the software ends up more displeasing than his accountants had predicted. Smart companies know innovation breeds innovation, and lends to even better new hires and partners. All of that scares the shit out of a man whose only real talent is dismissing the next big thing years before he attempts to emulate it forgetting that unlike on the desktop, you can't just sell something well below your capabilities and say" tough shit , but hey the next version will fix all that"
Gosh darn it all, I purchased a USB device but my 486 DX2 66 doesn't have a USB port, so I purchased a USB card so I could use my USB device and wouldn't you know it the USB card is PCI and I only have ISA slots. Then I puchased one of these new fangled LCD displays but my Trident video card couldn't push 1440x900 so I purchased a NVidia graphics card and wouldn't you know it the graphics card is PCIe and I don't even have an AGP slot! Then I purchased the new Office 2013 and put in my CD-ROM and wouldn't you know that Office 2013 is on a DVD! Sumabitch.
Buy it all - or not, and shut up!
Nothing new here...
What, if there was a war and nobody came...
Vista is over 5 years old. That is ancient in computer terms.
Who cares? Why should people spend their money upgrading when they have no reason to? To make Microsoft happy?
You don't see any other software vendors saying windows 7 only. They actually value their paying customers.
Vista does not offer DirectX11 GPU
Whats this got to do with office?
nor the DRM and document protection of Windows 7 for the sharing features of Sky Drive Pro.
This is really great. Windows 7 has more DRM. Let me run out and upgrade right away.
Dear John,
Since I need 2 GB of RAM to write this letter, I
It is stupid to relate just what the program needs. That doesn't tell an average user anything. If a program said "Requires 10MB of RAM, 50MB optimal," people would be confused, and might try it on ultra low spec systems. It should spec in terms of what the whole system, with OS and all, should have to run well.
For example a number of modern games recommend 4GB of RAM. Now they are all 32-bit apps and anyone who knows about the Windows memory model knows this means they won't be designed to use more than 2GB of RAM themselves under normal circumstances. So why the recommendation then? Well they are counting on using most of that 2GB, so they want to make sure there's plenty left over for the OS, virus scanner, IM, Steam, and other things people might have running. The program itself may only need 2GB allocated to it to run ideally, but it won't get 2GB of memory unless the system has a good bit more.
So makes sense to me you do things like Office in the same way. Also it makes sense to not be stingy on recommendations. Something I always hated back in the day was games that were under on their recommendations. They'd say something like "386 20MHz 1MB minimum, 486 25MHz 2MB recommended, 486 33MHz 2MB optimal." Now to me "optimal" means "runs really well cranked up" and "minimum" means "minimum to run reasonable." However what they really mean was "minimum to run the program at all, you can't really play at this level," and optimal meant "Runs reasonably well with this but you'll need a good bit more to crank it up. Said game would need like a 486 50MHz and 4MB to really run properly.
Well we shouldn't do that. It should be spec'd in terms of a reasonable usable minimum, and a recommended that is actually good performance. Well, for 64-bit 7 I'd say 2GB is a realistic minimum. With that, you can run the OS and an app or two reasonably well.
It's also not very demanding. 16GB of RAM is all of $90 these days. I have 16GB in my laptop just because why not? It bumped the cost hardly at all over 8GB.
It doesn't matter when Vista was released, what's important is when new computers were for sale with Vista pre-installed. Just a little over 2 years ago you could still find something like that in stores regularly. People who bought such a machine can't install the latest MS Office now.
Pretty good is actually pretty bad.
I can see two sides.
On the one hand it does sound marketing based on account of the fact that 7 and Vista are similar so you are right, little technical difference.
On the other hand it still requires support. If you officially support it you have to go and test everything on another two platforms (32-bit and 64-bit). This means regression testing on all the patches and all that jazz with it. It adds a non-trivial cost. Given that Vista never achieved much market penetration and most Vista users went to 7 when it came out, I can see just thinking it isn't worth the money and hassle to support it.
Remember that for MS support can't mean "Will probably run but might have problems or break shit we haven't tested it." Support has to mean full support and testing.
So I can't say what it was and it may have been purely marketing, but I can see a valid reason as well.
Bro, have you seen Microsoft's financials? Yes they are still very profitable but the 'growth' is looking dangerously like it will go backwards - and MS are completely unable to compete with Apple and Google in the important spaces those company cover. They need to ditch Vista support to get revenue quickly. Funny to think of Microsoft as needing cash quickly to make their financial statements look better but that is exactly what it looks like. Plus, they really, really want people to move to Windows 8 where Microsoft's marketplace can get some good lock-in on customers and developers.
What is this compatibility thing all about anyway? Who cares? Most people who use word processors don't upgrade their software or OS to that matter. People don't upgrade, they buy a new PC with a newly installed OS. That's my opinion and observations.
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Honestly, although I have access to newer versions of Office, I don't see the point. Not a single thing I want from a newer version of Office, and the bloating hardware requirements makes it that much easier to just say NO...
most folks still sending out .DOC files as well, only those with no clue are saving Word files as .DOCX.
What are you going to write on? Baby Seal skin would be good, after you get off all the fur.
Yes, but since nobody's using Vista there's no reason to support it.
I wish more software companies would do this. Take the actual minimum specs and double them. Just because it technically runs on old, shitty hardware, doesn't mean that is what it is intended for.
Who would have thought that word processing needs 1GB of RAM?
Especially from the "640k ought to be enough for anybody" company !
Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
I'm not planning on using it.
after their unexpectedly well made and uncharacteristically blunder-free XP release
You didn't run XP before SP1 did you?
Michael J. Ryan - tracker1.info
That and authors and solicitors and technical documentation writers, patent writers, translators .etc. also use the word processor as their primary tool. Since he/she mentions spreadsheets as well he could also be involved in "small-data" data-modeling, office administration or similar.
Just because you lack the imagination to see otherwise doesn't mean he/she is stuck in a low level job. Although even if he/she was there would be no need to be an offensive ass about it. Typists and secretaries play a necessary role in society.
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Complain about lost profits.
Life was hell, then I discovered Linux...
Frankly, I don't see your problem.
If they chose to upgrade to Office 2013 they are making Microsoft happy anyway and might as well upgrade to Windows 7.
If they don't want to spend the money to upgrade the operating system, why upgrade the office software in first place? It is even more expensive and the old one works just fine.
"It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
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Vista may be 5 years old as of it's introduction date, but it was still being sold as "new" in late 2009. It seems like MS should support Office 2013 as Vista is a reasonably recent Windows version.
But not because "XP needs to be wiped out", but because that will be the great chance for LibreOffice and the odt Format.
I have been running the Office 2013 preview release on my work PC for a good 6 hours now (so I therefore assume myself to be an authority on this matter) and I quite like it.
He never said 'primary tool.' Though that would be a good description for you.
MS is using their monopoly to force the whole world to upgrade again. If you run a business and a partner sends you a document in the latest fscking MS Office format, then you have little choice about the matter.
Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
I suppose you communicate via hand written notes on parchment?
I suppose you write your replies in a wordprocessor before copy&pasting it to Slashdot?
Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
5 years was ancient in the 1990s, but in the 2010s it's rather "good enough" for anything that is commonly done with MS Office.
And ... a DirectX 10 graphics card. I think that's even more implausible than the 1GB RAM. Did they port Office to WPF or something?
Yeahyeah I know, Direct 2D, fancy hardware accelerated text, etc. It's still kind of funny needing a GPU for documents.
Everything Microsoft produce this days are bloatwares which are bloated to the max
With bloatware like these how the hell they can survive in the tablet / smartphone platforms, where the CPU/GPU/RAM specs are much MUCH lower than that of the desktop ?
Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
Right up there with "PIN number" or "on the I-10 freeway" (freeway meaning "limited access highway" so that's "the Interstate Highway 10 limited access highway" -- ugh. No, it's just "on I-10", people....)
In his 3D rendered, Dx10, AAx16, Isotropic filtered, semi-transparent, texture mapped goodness.
They have managed to get DX11 installed on XP and it works just fine. You're repeating the PR copy from Microsoft.
They were lying to you.
Because you're trying to run Microsoft Excel and only Microsoft Excel does that by definition 100% correctly.
What you're NOT doing is trying to get the work you want done. You're only trying to use Excel.
I thought real technical writers turned up their nose at things such as MS Word anyway?
Inadequate English education breeds grammar nazis. If you'd been given the real deal with a play or two from Shakespear instead of whatever form of Ebonics that has been taught in US schools since Reagan you wouldn't be so hung up on spelling. Even better - hit the Chaucer, read the Millers Tale and you'll see it was a spell-as-you-speak language (and pretty well still is, especially on internet forum).
For simple documents, it's good. But for serious stuff it is slow, flaky and unreliable
That's an accurate description of MS Word. Serious documents (over 5-600 pages with lots of tables and charts) has a distressing habit of making Word lock up even with 16GB of memory.
Serious documents need something designed to separate content from presentation. I just wish the friendlier ones like Interleaf weren't so expensive.
now we'll need to download another compatibility program so that the 2013 users will be able to share their docs with people who don't want to be sent to MS HELL and upgrade again to something that is named the same, but all the icons and functions have been renamed to something completely oblivious again. (meaning not intuitive at all)
Good luck MS ofc 2013. die well....for instructions on how to do this speak directly with John Carmack.
So office now needs at least 2GB or ram, 3GB of HD, a DX-10 comptible video card, yet it still has pretty much exactly the same functionality as office 95.
Microsoft Office 95 required a 386DX or higher CPU, and either Windows 95, Windows NT 4.0, or Windows NT 3.51. 8 MB of RAM & 55 MB of hard disk space for the 'typical' install.
Except that many major business users are tied in to systems that are not readily upgradeable due to security tie-ins and the like, just like many bsinesses are still tied to IE6 because of some wacko reason. They will start receiving documents made in MSOffice 2013 and not be able to open them, because we all know inter-version compatability within MS Office is a dead bird.
Ho, hum. Another forced upgrade from a dying company.
Seriously, though, I recently read a post that claimed "Office functionality has peaked". It's true, you can only have so many features in a word processor before you're adding "fluff"; and when you finish adding all the fluff you can think of, then you start to rearrange the UI. After "ribbon", there's not much left. And you still need to maintain or increase your revenue contribution. This means selling copies of a new version, because everyone on the planet who needs a word processor already has a copy of Word.
So, for no good reason other than revenue flow (which is probably a very good reason), we have yet another forced upgrade. Ho, hum.
You cannot customize the installation directory, it must be installed to the same drive as Windows.
The root\vfs directory must be on that volume, otherwise Office will refuse to start (something about how it does its Virtual File System stuff... there are overrides in there for common Windows directories.
You can use NTFS junctions to redirect root\office15 though, which contains about 50% of the used bytes. root\vfs still requires about 1.3gb though.
People use what they learn on, they also only use on avarage 10% of the entire product. People need to learn the consepts and not the product like thay do now, if you understand how, then it is more open to the tools you can use.
You need to rembember there is allways other options when you know the underlying idea of it.
()-()
Most of them do. The competent ones use their brains as their primary tool.
If you want a neck bear, you can probably modify a Tiddy Bear.
The funniest thing is "DirectX 10-compatible graphics card for users wanting hardware acceleration." Say what?
You need hardware acceleration to write a memo? Or enter numbers into a spreadsheet?
Is that for Clippy?
I don't know if we can really complain. I mean, with Gnome/Ubuntu requiring 3D for the basic desktop environment anymore.
But still.
I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
It's also not very demanding. 16GB of RAM is all of $90 these days.
Provided your machine is new enough and physically large enough to accept such modules. My two-year-old 10" laptop, for example, won't take more than 2 GB according to crucial.com.
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If your shitty external device still uses RCA outputs, then go get a convertor.
Which converter do you recommend for standard-definition sources such as Wii, retro gaming (2nd to 6th generation consoles), VHS (I can think of a few films that haven't been rereleased on DVD), or pay TV in plans below the cable company's cheapest HD plan?
That said, all my figures were created elsewhere, and imported as EMFs (for vector graphics) or PNGs; and I used Endnote for the reference handling.
Since then, I've used Word's own referencing system. This turns out to be adequate if you:
Nobody complains that the HD TV they bought doesn't have RCA cable inputs.
I don't see how you arrived at that conclusion. It appears to assume that nobody is a fan of Wii or retro gaming, nobody watches films that haven't been rereleased on DVD over the past fifteen years, and that people always buy a BD player ($100) with every TV and upgrade their pay TV subscription to HD service ($200 more per year) the day they get the new TV. A TV with no backward-compatible composite or analog component video inputs isn't a TV at all; it's a computer monitor.
Quite a few [applications for Mac OS X] already require at least Leopard from 2007.
But how many do you expect to require Mountain Lion, which can't even be installed on 2008 Macs? I'm told the version of Xcode that targets iOS 6 will likely be among them.
framebuffer resolutions have gone up
By about eight percent. That's how many more pixels there are in 1920x1080 than there were in 1600x1200.
a single simple effect that covers a lot less than half the screen at a decent framerate
Likely response: "I don't need effects; I make my slideshows with cuts or wipes only, and those effects don't cover more than 1/20 of the screen in any given frame."
All jokes aside, I'm hoping they keep updating PowerPivot. It would be cool if some of the Direct X requirements were for making better/more visually appealing graphs.
because all the office heavy lifting will be done on dinky litter devices w/o keyboards.
Word processor pages are rendered similar to a web browser. We now use graphics card acceleration for browsers. Why not for publishing software?
Have you actually tried it? IT DOES NOT RUN!
Apple should be the one modded down factually incorrect.
Oddly the wikipedia page seems correct, even though that is usually the other way around.
“Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
>Try doing business with people who use metric paper sizes when you work in US sizes or the reverse. You can work around it, but all of a sudden your document isn't the same both places.
It's hard to understand what you mean.
If you sent someone a perfectly formatted .doc, the formatting would, of course, change when your European colleagues open it up. That's because they have their settings on A4.
It would never have been the same in both places.
On the other hand, if you (or they) send a PDF, your OS/printer will slightly enlarge/reduce and center the document so it all prints on an A4 sheet, or letter sheet. No muss, no fuss.
And the page numbering doesn't change, so you can still refer to page nos. in conference calls.
>Also, I don't know what decade you're living in, but if you have the same paper size selected word documents don't seem to have that problem across computers.
His experience (and mine) trump yours. You haven't seen that, but that doesn't prove it doesn't happen. He has, and that does prove it happens.
The usual reason is printer drivers. A very minute difference in space available will result in a line having to go to the next page, which can then have a cascading effect.
I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
Oh wait, Libre Office will still install :-) disaster avoided.
Indeed. My company recently moved from Office 2003 to Office 2007 (on Windows XP, btw).
With every new version of Office you can pretty much double the size of the memory a spreadsheet is allowed to use.
Excel 2007 also has the feature of allowing multithreaded calculations (which can help a lot provided your plugins are threadsafe).
...bloat bloat bloat....
Wait just a cottonpickin' minute...
MS is developing WIndows 8 which is specifically geared towards Tablets -- so much so, that they are willing to piss off their desktop users.
Now comes Office 2013, geared towards Windows 8 -- except with those requirements, there's no way to run it on a Tablet.... so.... uh.... what exactly is the point?
Is this a case of the right hand not knowing what the left hand is doing? Why develop an office suite that requires you have the latest and greatest power-hungry desktop, and then say "but you have to run it under our tablet-oriented OS" ?
Seriously Microsoft... fuck you.
If telephones are outlawed, then only outlaws will have telephones.
Do we indeed use graphics accel for browsers?
Also, browsers normally show videos and other content that may need to be hardware accelerated (H264).
It's hard to see what would be the same in word procs, unless the document were just a collection of videos, in which case, why would you print it?
I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
What's alarming about this is about how Vista is being written out of Microsoft support history so quickly. If I buy Windows 8, and it doesn't have the "critic mass" required, does that mean MS is going to quickly drop support on that too? Another reason to be wary of 8.
Vista is over 5 years old. That is ancient in computer terms.
Who cares? Why should people spend their money upgrading when they have no reason to? To make Microsoft happy?
You don't see any other software vendors saying windows 7 only. They actually value their paying customers.
Vista does not offer DirectX11 GPU
Whats this got to do with office?
nor the DRM and document protection of Windows 7 for the sharing features of Sky Drive Pro.
This is really great. Windows 7 has more DRM. Let me run out and upgrade right away.
Yeah like Apple who drops support the previous version of the OS immediately after their updated one comes out! Oh wait.... There's no reason to buy Office 2013 just to buy it. But if you're going to upgrade you need to use a modern day OS. It's not rocket science. XP is going on 12 years. Microsoft has easily held up their end of the support bargain compared to any company. Probably doubled it.
Hmm.. let's see
Install Windows 8 in a vm, install MS Office 2013.. add a pinch of salt.. might just work.
But seriously, does that mean MS 360 doesn't download and run everywhere?
There's a hole in your Mind.
Isn't it just a logical progression from rendering parts of the desktop on 7 using DirectX, to doing the same for the layout on Word? I mean, any processing you can offload from the CPU is generally a good thing, especially when you're not using the GPU at all.
It also does point out hardware acceleration isn't actually required.
"It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him." - Tolkien
Using Quick Brown Fox on my Vic20....
Powerpoint has been able to use hardware acceleration for animation for years. I'm guessing this is just building off that.
Please reread that line, it says for users WANTING hardware acceleration.
It's not mandatory, it is optional and personally I like having the option of using hardware acceleration.
This is the sig that says NI (again)
It could be for those spiffy Powerpoint animations.
Unless you're using ISO 8601 then you can't claim to be using a rational date system.
That sounds interesting, care to elaborate?
This thread is now about getting the most out of Windows X:P
This person is correct, however, don't try installing any antivirus software with less than 1GB.
That and authors and solicitors and technical documentation writers, patent writers, translators .etc. also use the word processor as their primary tool.
Actually, only mediocre TD writers and translators use word processor as their primary tool. Modern documentation processes often require structured input that's difficult to achieve in a typical word processor and quality translation requires CAT tools.
Word processor pages are rendered similar to a web browser. We now use graphics card acceleration for browsers. Why not for publishing software?
Now?
Now?
We were using graphics card acceleration for browsers and word processors in the 90s. And didn't require some fancy 3D hardware to do so.
A technical document particularly like my thesis in electrical engineering is mostly equations and images . I prefer latex for the sheer beauty of equations that it churns out . I like the convenience of word+math-type but it doesn't come out "perfect" looking and cross referencing is cumbersome .I wish someone at Microsoft spent some time in improving these two features than making it cuter . But except for word other elements of the office suite really kicks ass particularly excel and Visio . Libreoffice cal hangs at large data points which excel just chews through and Visio is a just pure awesomeness . I mean i am a linux user and used to get stuff done with xfig but visio rendering is so much better that i decided to donate my green to MS that to my pirate overlords :) .
My guess is that the DirectWrite API used for high-quality text rendering depends on changes made in DirectX 10, and I'm guessing one of them is a change in how texture coordinates are interpreted (corner vs. center).
So we pushed the bar up AMD on video can hit that mark
read how chosing OpenGL over DirectX resulted in business opportunities that personally made him $US 3.5 million dollars in a few months when his OpenGL code was very easily ported to the iPad/iPhone unlike DirectX apps that are stuck on the Windows desktop
True, OpenGL is portable to iOS and Android, but DirectX is portable to Xbox 360.
tricked developers into building workflows using DirectX, since MS knew this would make it hard for game developers to leave
Was it the workflows, or was it access to a console to which a game in a living room friendly genre could be ported? The only console open to anyone who's not a veteran of the traditional video game industry is the Xbox 360, whose XNA API is based on DirectX.
Why not for publishing software?
That's an ambitious... nay, generous term
Gotta love vendor lockin. MS wins, computer uses lose. What a bunch of saps.
Since many companies are still using XP and don't have any particular desire to move to 7 or 8, I wonder if Office 2013 will draw them into upgrading, (which has to be done all at once and can be a real hassle) or will investment in the present OS draw them into sticking with the previous version of Office and calling it good?
Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
It's funny how, on Windows XP, Microsoft wasn't even able to port an old-fashioned, low on features browser such as Internet Explorer 9, whereas on the same OS you're free to install, say, Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox and enjoy the latest and the greatest of web technologies. (And let's remember that even on Vista, with IE9, it's not native HTML5. )
Since I can't imagine the changed Microsoft deliberately cutting compatibility with their older and not-so-old OSes in order to force their customers to upgrade, I have to think that Microsoft's coders are either lazy or incompetent.
"since nobody's using Vista"
Where 'nobody' = approx 40 million
Nothing is compatible with Vista... how is this news?
MS's AV option might be practical. It has a much lower memory footprint than the other common options and from the group-tests I've seen its detection rate isn't disappointing either. I put it on an old 512Mb laptop of a friend when we rebuilt it after walware infection and it seemed efficient enough, though that was on XP rather then 7.
Count me as one of the few then....when writing anything remotely substantial in Word/OpenOffice I always use autonumbering, styles, headers, etc. So much simpler to define the style once and be able to change one thing and affect the whole document.
LaTeX is used as a major step in most pre-press system by Journal and Press publishers, usually buried out of sight under some GUI.
WYSIWYG is zero use marking up a long complex document like Legal Codes, Airplane Operation manuals and is pretty useless for most scientific papers, theses ... where the structure needs to drive different presentations, and especially useless for math and science papers or stuff with lots of non homogeneous imports.
LaTeX takes 30 min to teach, unless you need to write styles ... where you need to know TeX which is a week study to teach the basics, but you can do a lot with it. There are LaTex Visual Shells for Windows and Linux/iOS if you need them.
FreameMaker, especially at version 1, was also good but the bloat of the GUI eventually killed it in later versions.
I use LaTex for everything and a simple shell to give me instant ... This is what it will look like by running LaTex and xdvi, and then vi on the source in a loop.
Gruezi omb
There hasn't been any research in about 2 years. But at that point the range was from 5% (india) to 22%(Poland & Czech Republic) with the US at 9%. The market share of Linux may be low; but similar to how Firefox progressed Open Office and derivatives have progressed to large user bases:
http://www.webmasterpro.de/portal/news/2010/02/05/international-openoffice-market-shares.html
If Linux does ever win the desktop it will need first to most people's software stack with open source alternatives so instead of people running
Mostly proprietary software on proprietary OSes they are running
Mostly Free software on proprietary Oses.
DX10 level hardware is hardly fancy. Try finding a PC built in the last couple years that doesn't support DX10. It's even been built into the intel chips for some time. DX10 hardware isn't required either, software fallback still works.
-1 overrated isn't the same thing as "I disagree".
I think it's ok because xp and vista is just pretty old. We discuss about it on this forum called CashLoaderz. http://www.cashloaderz.eu/ In this place you can make at least 8$ a day and it's so easy.This forum is for everyone anyway we specialize in a search-engine oriented online marketing including all methods. Unique community, sophisticated forum system including special forum currency, private sections (invite-only, ppd exchange etc.), secure irc channels, ranking, beautiful interface and much more. What exactly you can find here? 1. Privacy [Private section] (unique VIP membership with many benefits) 2. Money-making techniques [general section] 3. Great community, useful tips, tricks and tutorials [lobby] 4. News all over the world [public forum] 5. Answers to your questions and everything you can imagine [everywhere] We have forum-sections for everything.
The time to separate the O/S and the Office divisions has arrived.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
What part of "long with a DirectX 10-compatible graphics card for users wanting hardware acceleration" in TFS did you not comprehend?
Microsoft, Office, Windows, Compatible.
"Required OS"
Attempts to install it have just failed.
Enjoy
“Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
It was really, really too bad that it works at all with Windows 7, because that makes it a lousy touch application for Windows 8. I was expecting something that worked well on Windows 8 tablets. As has been reported in many media, it is not a touch application. I am using Windows 8 almost exclusively on my tablet and struggling with Office 2013. M$ should have built a version of Office for Windows 8 Metro only. In Outlook the only thing you can even manipulate with touch are the size of the messages themselves (and of course simple scrolling).
Seriously? For Office Programs? So now the phrase will be, "But can it run Office 2013?!"
Don't know about you, but i've been using LaTeX for everything for years...
Is that tomography or cabling?
Oh so agreed! To do layout (of multi-hundred-page documents including lots of graphics and photos, I have (since 1988, no less) used Ventura Publisher. Not the same version, I'll admin (grin!) but 9 or 10 are some of the best tools around for putting something out that will impress the reader no end (which is, after all, the whole point).
For a word processor. It needs 3GB of space to store documents you're working with. This is ridiculous. This is bloat. This is not good. There should not be any comments here saying we need to be upgrading to Office 2K13.
i didnt even think people still paid for office with all the great free alternatives.
Making something artificially obsolete is not new.
Apple uses this trick nearly every time they offer a new OS. ARTIFICIALLY making a machine obsolete can sell computers.
Since MS doesn't make or sell machines, they can only "obsolete" an operating system.
As usual, buyer beware! Too bad the open source wasn't well funded.
office libre or open office or any number of FREE and compatible office suits are out there. and they work with MS Windows of any flavor. unless Microsoft puts a poison pill in to it's main OS that puts the kibosh on using NON Microsoft software. the second they do that , they are admitting that open source software is much superior that they are afraid of it. simple, even for a mush head to understand. perhaps it is time for Linux to shit or get off the pot. make Linux better than dirty little Billy's crap OS.
no doubt that office 2013 is one of the best product of microsoft ever. direct link given below:
32bit
http://care.dlservice.microsoft.com/download/4/7/1/4712B4E1-4DD9-4468-B8A4-507D7F988B1F/professionalplus_en-us_x86.exe?lcid=1033
64bit
http://care.dlservice.microsoft.com/download/4/7/1/4712B4E1-4DD9-4468-B8A4-507D7F988B1F/professionalplus_en-us_x64.exe?lcid=1033
some important features about office 2013
http://www.techstalks.com/office-2013-best-features/
Because you can?