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I have Office 2002. Should I buy into Office Home and Student now or wait a
couple of months and get 2010 version? I am a casual user and do an occasional powerpoint. Will there be a price reduction on 2007 when 2010 comes out? is 2010 going to be a better all around tool for a casual user, or the upgrades for the more sophisticated users? Thanks. Bernie -- Home is the sailor, Home from the sea, And the hunter is home from the hill. |
#2
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You should consider OpenOffice (openoffice.org) it's new and free.
"Bernie" wrote: I have Office 2002. Should I buy into Office Home and Student now or wait a couple of months and get 2010 version? I am a casual user and do an occasional powerpoint. Will there be a price reduction on 2007 when 2010 comes out? is 2010 going to be a better all around tool for a casual user, or the upgrades for the more sophisticated users? Thanks. Bernie -- Home is the sailor, Home from the sea, And the hunter is home from the hill. |
#3
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First, I haven't looked at 2010 at all yet, so this is all "uninformed
opinion". Historically most of the added features to the entire Office line have been along the lines of improving use among groups or making the applications more "net aware". While Excel 2007 added some long awaited functions [SUMIFS() comes to mind], that kind of thing is generally the exception that proves the rule. For a single user, I can't think of a thing I can do with 2007 that I couldn't do in Excel '97. Many things I do today for clients could have been done in older versions of Excel. Most of those things aren't even "collaborative" although they may do a lot of data accessing of other Excel files or databases on their own LAN. Somehow we manage to get by mostly on Excel 2003, and the differences between 2002 (XP) and 2003 were negligible. As far as price breaks on 2007 when 2010 hits the street? Well, who knows? That's not a given, but all things considered, I'd place a small wager that 2007 will be discounted quite a bit once 2010 is released. Quite frankly, given your description of your use of Office and it's applications, I'd probably stick with what I have, or, as dlw said - give consideration to Open Office if you end up with an occassional demand for the 2007 file format. "Bernie" wrote: I have Office 2002. Should I buy into Office Home and Student now or wait a couple of months and get 2010 version? I am a casual user and do an occasional powerpoint. Will there be a price reduction on 2007 when 2010 comes out? is 2010 going to be a better all around tool for a casual user, or the upgrades for the more sophisticated users? Thanks. Bernie -- Home is the sailor, Home from the sea, And the hunter is home from the hill. |
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