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
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beware he who would deny you access to information, for in his mind he dreams himself your master
No, that is incorrect. They are perfectly capable.
They have no business reason to support people who do not purchase the new operating system.
ipv6 is my vpn
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?
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
Nobody complains that the new Chevy Volt isn't compatible with their set of tools they bought just last year to work on cars.
Nobody complains that the HE dishwasher they bought wont except regular dishwashing crystals.
Nobody complains that the new bike they bought can't use all the old tires they have from the last bike.
Nobody complains that the HD TV they bought doesn't have RCA cable inputs.
Why is that? Face it people, progress happens and sometimes you've got to let go of the old and invest in the new.
Luckily there is eBay and Craigslist where you can sell your old stuff to someone who can't afford the new shiny yet. Give them a break and sell it to them.
A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
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
Makes you wonder if there isn't a strategy in there somewhere.
Windows 7: Corporate
Windows 8: Beta testing new stuff on Home users
Windows 9: Corporate
A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
A graphics processor helps increase the performance of certain features, such as drawing tables in Excel 2013 Preview or transitions, animations, and video integration in PowerPoint 2013 Preview. Use of a graphics processor with Office 2013 Preview requires a Microsoft DirectX 10-compliant graphics processor that has 64 MB of video memory. These processors were widely available in 2007. Most computers that are available today include a graphics processor that meets or exceeds this standard. However, if you or your users do not have a graphics processor, you can still run Office 2013 Preview.
Also it would seem the requirements are rounded to the nearest 0.5gb and probably are for extremely heavy usage cases.
Precisely why would Microsoft Office need DirectX? a 3D spreadsheet maybe? Maybe a really awesome animated book report?
Clippy3D.
When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
Exactly what progress have they made in the office application field that justifies this argument?
The box says "Windows 7 or better", so it should run in Ubuntu and MacOSX
But but but TEH RIBBON!
To offset political mods, replace Flamebait with Insightful.
I saw a Windows tablet at Staples the other day when I was picking up my Nexus 7. It's about twice as thick as any other tablet on display. I wonder why that is.
My guess: thermal insulation... you see, it's bad when the components overheat because of the strain Office 2013 put on them, but is worse when the customers suffer burns because of it.
Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
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.
They have no business reason to support people who do not purchase the new operating system.
Actually, they do. Microsoft might wish to avoid being prosecuted for a Clayton Act Violation. (Tying.)
When all you have is a hammer, every problem starts to look like a thumb.
They need the extra thickness for the patent licenses.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
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.
Many,
Pivot Tables to name one. One click charting. HUGE spreadsheets.
I am not even an MS apologist, but even I can see that.
Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
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.
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.
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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Nobody complains that the new Chevy Volt isn't compatible with their set of tools they bought just last year to work on cars.
Actually they would complain bitterly and use plenty of expletives. I haven't heard of any incompatibilities.
Nobody complains that the HE dishwasher they bought wont except regular dishwashing crystals.
Probably because HS detergents cost the same as regular and it's an expendable resource. If it cost them a few hundred extra dollars, they'd complain loudly.
Nobody complains that the new bike they bought can't use all the old tires they have from the last bike.
Probably because the new bike came with tires. Of course, they usually CAN use the same ones if it's the same type of bike. Nobody wants to use 10 speed racing tires off road.
Nobody complains that the HD TV they bought doesn't have RCA cable inputs.
Mine has RCA inputs. It added HDMI and VGA. What's to complain about?
Luckily there is eBay and Craigslist where you can sell your old stuff to someone who can't afford the new shiny yet. Give them a break and sell it to them.
MS claims that Windows is non-transferable. You guessed it, people have complained.
Ah, you want emacs then.
Those who can't do, teach. Those who can't teach either, do tech support.
If its like the one I saw they are using some lame ass CPUs in them which means they need extra room to get the heat out through pipes and fans. why hasn't anybody put one of the AMD C or E series chips into a tablet? Those are nice chips, full 1080P video through HDMI thanks to the Radeon GPU and pretty low on battery suckage. I have one of the E350 netbooks and I get around 6 hours playing 720P and more if I'm just surfing and don't need bluetooth. It seems like it'd be perfect for a tablet and would let you run all your X86 programs, add a transformer style keyboard with extra battery and you'd have a tablet that turns into an all day laptop with full X86 compatibility, sounds sweet to me.
As for TFA...damn, can Ballmer and Sinofsky torpedo this company a little more? Why don't they just send a page to the XP and Vista users offering Libre Office or Google docs while they are at it? Between fracturing IE all to hell, followed by keeping many games on DX9 because they refused to backport to XP, to making sure all those Vista users (Yeah i know the number is dropping but there is still millions of them and they ARE supported until 2017 as far as EOL goes) won't buy their Office suite I swear MSFT couldn't be run any worse if the team leads were picked by Cook over at Apple. Its like watching the PHB at Dilbert just bumble a company straight into the ground.
ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
Who would have thought that word processing needs 1GB of RAM?
Especially from the "640k ought to be enough for anybody" company !
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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.
only those with no clue are saving Word files as .DOCX.
I thought the new docx/xlsx files were quite a bit smaller than the old doc/cls formats? So it would be entirely reasonable to use the new default format for saving files.
To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
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
Word processor pages are rendered similar to a web browser. We now use graphics card acceleration for browsers. Why not for publishing software?