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Microsoft now says a plug-in that will allow Office 2004 to fully work with the new formats won't be ready until six to eight weeks after the Office 2008 for Mac software suite ships, sometime in the second half of this year. Instead, the company is offering a separate downloadable converter program, starting Tuesday, designed to enable Office for Mac users to convert Word 2007's .docx files to the Rich Text Format, or RTF, which can be read by all Mac OS X versions of Office.
The Redmond, Wash., software giant said it hopes to have similar conversion tools for Excel and PowerPoint by the summer. This is not the first time Microsoft has pushed out its plans for Mac support for the new Office file formats. In December, Microsoft said a conversion tool for the formats, originally expected around the time of the product's January mainstream launch, wouldn't come until March or April.
"We had to make some choices," said Amanda Lefebvre, a marketing manager in Microsoft's Mac business unit. "We are continuing to focus our development on the completion of Office 2008."
On the Windows side of the house, Microsoft has a downloadable converter that enables Office 2003 to seamlessly process documents written in the new formats. As of January, Microsoft had said it planned to have a test version of a similar tool for Mac Office 2004 available this spring. Now, however, it says the full-featured tools will ship shortly after the release of Office 2008, which is designed to natively handle the new file formats.
Lefebvre said that while the Word converter tool being made available for download on Tuesday has some limitations, it also has some benefits, such as an option that lets people convert multiple documents at once.
"Part of our goal is to get something out there up and running," she said. "Word is the most frequently used (Office application)."
Lefebvre said Microsoft's efforts to finish Office 2008 are still on track, though she did not give any details about when or if a public beta version might be available. Microsoft said in March that it had started private testing of the software.
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They can be used as a conversion tool, if needed.
It's peculiar that MS is allowing itself to fall behind in support of
it's own Office Suite and file formats. You'd think they'd show a
little love to Office users - it's 1 of the 2 products that they net
profits from, they should throw the customer a bone rather than
get them to download an open-source office suite that now has
better MS document format suport than MS' own products.
The only thing not peculiar is a fan boy making up stuff at random in an ignorant attempt to make MS look bad.
profits from"
From what I gather, it will be quite some time before the new office takes over the old.
I understand maybe if a corporation wants to upgrade, but a lot of small businesses and other individuals, unless they do a lot of work related tings around it and make a living from that, I think would care less about at this point.
And we're in education, not tech writing.
too lenient with Microsoft.
No one rushed out to upgrade to O97 and those that did ended up having to Save As the old formats when their customers, etc. returned the files as unreadable.
A lot more people use MS Office now than in 97, and since there hasn't been a single featured added in the last 10 years that most users want or need, very few people are in a rush to buy the latest Office versions.
Besides, a growing number of goverments and businesses are requiring documents in Open Document Format, not Microsoft Open Office XML.
It will be years, if then, before anyone really needs to be able to read Microsoft's new formats.
I also think any current Open office product compared to Office 2007 is a total joke.
open Word OpenXML files for over two months now.
I think during that whole time there have been about five Word-built .doc files that I couldn't open; none of which had any real importance.
I can happily continue using NeoOffice on the Mac and OOo on Linux, thanks much.
/P
have too optimistic of a schedule or their programmer's find out
they screwed up in the last month's of a project. I actually think
their is another Vista floating around Microsoft that could not be
completed.
- who cares
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by RompStar_420
May 16, 2007 7:24 AM PDT
- There are so many better products out there for the Mac from the Open Community and they are all free. Who needs a half baked product anyways.
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