Microsoft Office 2019 Will Only Work on Windows 10 (theverge.com)
Microsoft on Thursday provided an update on Office 2019, in which it revealed that the apps will only run on Windows 10. From a report: In a support article for service and support of Windows and Office, Microsoft has revealed you'll need to upgrade to Windows 10 if you want the latest version of Office without subscribing to the company's Office 365 service. It's a move that's clearly designed to push businesses that are holding off on Office 365 into subscriptions, as the standalone Office 2019 software will only be supported on Windows 10 and not Windows 7 or Windows 8.1 machines. Microsoft is also altering the support lifecycle for Office 2019, so it will receive 5 years of mainstream support and then "approximately 2 years of extended support."
Suck it Microsoft. Suck it long and hard.
Eat my ass, MS. I'm not running Windows 10, and you can't make me!
By showing a "better" (ahem) OS, then kill it off by writing your "best" (cough) software to only run on your newest OS.
Been that way for decades from MS. Nothing new.
So rise up, all ye lost ones, as one, we'll claw the clouds.
LibreOffice includes a word processor, spreadsheet, presentation, and a database.
It's free!
https://www.libreoffice.org/
https://www.youtube.com/c/BrendaEM
As a self employed contractor software subscriptions are killing my business. Adobe has forced me into a subscription model where I'm paying 50$ a month to use their software, Microsoft is pretty much forcing the subscription model of Office 365 on me. Will Microsoft have Windows on a subscription model soon? My monthly fees are going to pile up it's going to make the decision to seek open source alternatives and simple choice.
Sent from my TARDIS
I can't imagine business standing for this. I'm sure many would run Office 2016 for 10 years if they had to.
Windows 7 reaches of end of life in 2020.
The Daddy casts sleep on the Baby. The Baby resists!
Part what's been killing Windows for decades is the bloat after bloat of compatibility layers that make it work with software all the way back to Windows 3.1 in some cases.
Mike @ The Geek Pub. Let's Make Stuff!
I have to run Windows. It was my choice -- accounting software. It is really the ONLY reason Windows is in the office anymore...
Sadly Word / Excel work better on Windows IMHO; too many keyboard shortcuts missing in Office for Mac...
I hate ribbons too. Won't use them.
So I prefer Office XP which runs just fine on Windows 7 which run just fine virtualized running as a process on a Mac server.
Windows has no business talking to the Internet (so it can't) which removes a whole bunch of security issues. I can run like this indefinitely. So ... fuck you Microsoft.
Seriously, FUCK Windows 10. Not only it is de facto spyware, it's a bug-ridden piece of shit, and it has one of the ugliest interface I've ever used. Also, fuck MS-Office, fact is LibreOffice will do everything that 99% of users need.
Circumcision is child abuse.
plus or minus a year... or two...
If you ever wanted a road map to alienate all your customers Microsoft has provided it.
Personally, I gave up on them years ago, but if they keep going the way they have been, they will start driving mainstream users away. Is it any wonder the home PC market is nearly dead already.
First law of people: People are generally stupid.
Why is the conclusion: "It's a move that's clearly designed to push businesses that are holding off on Office 365 into subscriptions"? They can upgrade to Windows 10 and get Office 2019. (Or do nothing, or migrate to some other platform/software, etc.) Microsoft has clearly done everything they can to push users to Windows 10 (automatic updates, anyone?), so why is that not considered? They seem hellbent on making Windows 10 "the most popular Windows ever".
owners and start putting those monthly fees towards a developer for whatever pieces of software you need developed/polished sufficiently to compete with them?
It won't necessarily work for everything, but the more well polished open source apps that get produced, especially with funding controlled by small players like you, the more competitive you can remain while reducing your costs over time (assuming you don't need a future redevelopment of the software you are using to stay competitive.
I use Office only only rarely, but would like to ask to heavier users... I remember 2K as being a clear improvement over 97. Then you got 2003 that was similar to 2000 so no reason to upgrade. Then 2007 that had the dreaded ribbon and was file-incompatible so you more or less had to upgrade to open the incompatible files every moron that just couldn't be in a release that wasn't the last one sent you. Then 2010?, perhaps, 2013, I'm pretty sure that exists, probably others, then 365, one release to end all releases and in the darkness bind all users. As I read what I wrote I'm starting to think that they will change again the file format for Office 2019, just in case...
So the question to power users is: Has been any reason, i mean feature-wise, to upgrade Office since Office 2000 ?
Rome taught me patience and assiduous application to detail. Virtues which temper the boldness of great, general views.
I'm still using Office 2013 and my wife is using 2010 and they both work just fine. In fact the newer versions (such as 2016 we use at work) have more bloated crap glued to the already cluttered interface. Is there anything in these newer versions that makes for a compelling reason to update?
...Just kidding. You know they're only doing that to keep gov offices from switching to Linux and make those idiotic enough to switch back to Windows to have to upgrade. LibreOffice is your friend.
There are a couple of possibilities to avoid this.
LibreOffice has decent but not great interoperability with Office. I'd like to see that improve, so it's a better alternative.
The other question is whether Office 2019 might run in Wine. That might be a way to circumvent this restriction.
Also, considering that some Office 365 subscriptions allow you to install Office on up to 5 computers, it sounds like this would still be possible on Windows 7 with a subscription. If so, this limitation is purely artificial and is a way to force Windows 10 on consumers. Microsoft deserves every bit of the backlash that they receive for this.
Will it work on Windows 11? I hear it's 1 louder.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
One word: WordPad.
99% of all documents can be created on WordPad.
That's fine by me. We're still using Office 2003. Works fine.
I don't respond to AC's.
Does it not constitute a tie in? Which is illegal at least here in UK. You can not make a product or service unnecessarily dependant on another product or service in order to squeeze more money from consumer, which is what seems to be happening here.
Shot...
Microsoft
OUCH!
I use rather advanced features in Microsoft Word (and sometimes Excel), and Word 2007 is still perfectly suitable for all the publications I produce.
"The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
If only people contributed to LibreOffice and Linux instead of giving billions to Microsoft you wouldn't be In the Windows 10 Monoculture. You have two years before Windows 7 expires, use that to plan your escape route.
so 2019 365 will work in windows or will be some like 2016 SP X fully works with 2019 (that is 365 only)
Never buy or use Microsoft products unless they are forced on you at the retail PC level.
LibreOffice on the other hand works on all operating systems and is great.
https://www.libreoffice.org/
https://www.libreoffice.org/download/portable-versions/
https://portableapps.com/apps/office/libreoffice_portable
[FreeBSD]
https://www.freebsd.org/doc/handbook/desktop-productivity.html
[Tumbleweed]
https://software.opensuse.org/download.html?project=LibreOffice%3AFactory&package=libreoffice
https://www.libreoffice.org/download/android-viewer/
Everything else is frankly obsolete. Microsoft needs to die. Spyware.
LibreOffice 6 has just been released...
fuck off, microsoft.
we don't want your forced-subscription model.... for office ***OR*** windows.
It isn't like you can run their newest version of iWork on old versions of OSX. You need 10.6 to even get to the App Store installer for it.
Business is probably shrinking and the good old days are over for company that produces OS and charges $$, got to find a new revenue. I'm saying this again, microsoft is trying to create full lock in a platform to sell adds, spy, control you or anyone using it, anyone who is in this business could clearly see whats happening, question is, could they success? I'm predicting the whole microsoft thingy will fail down the road, well it's very hard to compete with free.. shit.
Anyone else on the East coast logging in at 8 AM, wanting to create a document first thing and end up waiting (get coffee, whatever) while that POS app validates that MS is giving you permission to use it today? F' that.
LibreOffice runs on all the operating systems I use. Even the OS's I choose to use because Windows 10's aggressive data harvesting is chasing me away from Windows.
Obviously Microsoft is determined to get everyone on Windows 10. Yes, there are options for Office suites like Libre and Open Office. But how many average folks even heard of either of them? I've mentioned both as options many times to well educated people who did not have a clue about Libre or Open Office.
Maybe this is part of the problem open source people. You confine yourselves to your own little world, and never bother to reach out to the average PC user. You just expect people to know this stuff is there.
And here's the link to give them your money.
(T>t && O(n)--) == sqrt(666)
Seriously..
All you really need is orifice 2010.
I mean seriously..
There are no new features that MS could bring out that would make the package revolutionary.
I mean,
Seriously other than Eye candy. What the fuck can MS really bring???
When your done "PEGGIN" Beau, can you shed some light on the matter? When your done wiping down the "tool" with lysol, can you bring more substance to this conversation?
From my cold dead hands
Windows 10 was released mid-2015, office 2019 will ship almost 4 years later, and of course Office 2016 and Office 2013 as well as Office 2010 will all work on several well-deprecated OSes when Office 2019 is released.
I am certain that Apple's latest version of Pages, iMovie, etc. all run perfectly fine and are supported on 4 year-old OS X releases... right?
Will the latest OS X even install on a 4 year-old Mac?
Ken
...is dead?
Not while there is a dollar to seize from computer users
... using the same old install CD on 9 computers.
All of the shit, Excel, Access, Word, Power Point, and Outlook work just great on XP, 7, 8.1 and 10.
It little behooves the best of us to comment on the rest of us.
And after upgrading to Windows 10, we will break something else to force you to upgrade to Windows 11 (which well return to a name, not actually using the number 11, to maximize confusion and incompatibility).
Microsoft's biggest cash cow is IP lawsuits. Every time you buy an Android phone, you are unwillingly contributing to Microsoft's (and Apple's) coffers. Microsoft is a leech on innovation.
Scumbags.
Of course there's open-source alternatives like Libre Office and Open Office, aren't there?
Also, I'll bet cash money that someone comes up with a hack or some sort of 'shim' or 'wrapper' that will allow it to install under Windows 7/8/8.1.
This sounds like a pretty good case for a lawsuit - Microsoft using Office to push Windows. Didn't we already have a trial regarding these issues?
I need my data, my spreadsheets and documents. I don't want them held ransom or have access cut off to them because ever-reliable Microsoft botches something.
---- The above post was generated by the Turing Institute. Maybe.
Yep.. there is no way IM going to recommend this to my 1000+ clients. I will tell them to avoid like the plague, and I'm already researching exchange replacements.. its time to bury Microsoft its days are done.
Our shareholders aren't happy that we're haemorrhaging market share so let's make our subscription based cloud offering look more attractive.
"Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
Because I will only work on Windows 7
I draft everything in Pages, but are stuck exporting to word for the "rest of the world". Word is so caught up in multiple functions for huge groups collaborating (or whatever the fuck big companies do) that it sucks for basic word-smithery.
Dead tree publishing is a vanishing use case. Both people who still need it can upgrade to Windows 10, or try Libreoffice. Tools for modern collaboration and online/social publishing are generally web based, free and accessible from any laptop or mobile device. A better question is how does Microsoft even get a return on investment to keep developing Office at this point.
Look, I'm on board with everyone else who believes that Win7 was the last truly good release of Windows. Similarly, I can understand Microsoft not supporting an OS that's going to have less than a year left of extended support upon release day. Not in favor of it, mind you, but it at least makes sense.
Windows 8.1's extended support is in effect until 2023, by which point there will be another Office waterfall release (unless it's subscription-only by that point). Not supporting an OS whose lifecycle indicates the existence of support in excess of the three year Office release cadence is far different than not supporting Win7; even Office 2010 ran on XP even though XP had less time left than 8.1 will have after the 2019 release. It's clear that this is adoption pressure rather than support pragmatism.
When contrasted with Windows 10's biggest gripes, 8.1 isn't that bad in comparison. Sure, the Start screen sucks and the 'charms' menu is stupid, but Classic Shell fixes both of those things effectively and permanently. The Pro version of Win 8.1 ships with full-blown Hyper-V, Edge doesn't constantly hijack PDF associations, Store apps don't randomly download without permission or intent, and it's possible to control update reboots and decline said updates entirely. The new task manager is helpful, Cortana is thankfully absent, and pretty much all of the appy-apps are removable. I hate to say it, but I'm keeping my Win8.1 key around depending on how bad Win10 gets (and it's almost there for me, held back only by W10 Privacy and a few other similar utilities).
Really, the big question is what new features MS is going to be adding to 2019 over 2016 that makes it genuinely worthwhile. Basically the only features that seem to have gotten improvement have been the ones involving Office365 integration, with everything else remaining more or less stagnant for some time. If they're going to use Office 2019 as leverage to pressure the Win7/Win8 people, it's going to have to have something pretty spectacular. Office has been mature since 2003 (though there have been a handful of useful improvements in Excel and Outlook in 2007 and 2010), LibreOffice has made solid improvements to the point where it's basically just lacking the Office ecosystem and a mail client, and G-Suite is quickly becoming the preferred browser-based office suite for the 'good enough' crowd and its massive base in education is not improving MS's standing. Office is no longer the undisputed productivity suite it once was.
An "only works on an OS we're not going to" is a sales pitch that may well encourage users to skip, or finally look for alternatives. Then again, the real question is when Nadella is going to be either bold or desperate enough to turn Windows into a subscription service.
If you're not a serious publisher or corp type, Office 97 or OO or LibreOffice will do the job
What a fantastic reason to go ahead and download and install LibreOffice. Because fuck Microsoft and all their evil. LibreOffice is better than Microsoft Office in every important respect. Sure, learning it and getting proficient may take time and effort, but nothing worth doing is without a certain requirement of investment in effort, and think of the payoff. You get your company switched over to LibreOffice, you are one step closer to freedom and autonomy from Microsoft. You keep using their shitty software, you continue to be a slave. Your choice.
I'm on W7
I'd ask him. I can't count the number of cluster* that being stuck on Win7 has deleted weekends. One department has cost me and my staff 1000 hours because of one a*hole manager.
Eat shit and die, Microsoft.
Have a new CPU running on W7? Installed the March 2017 security update? You now have a popup every 15 seconds telling you you have an unsupported CPU!
Combine that with forced spying back ported to windows 7 and thats a recipe for great customer care right there.
Yeay!
Per Microsoft, Windows 7 is EOL in early January of 2019, so why the fuck would you expect that Office 2019 would run on Windows 7?