Is Microsoft Abandoning Office For Mac

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Microsoft So yesterday I decided to write a guide to getting started with Microsoft OneNote, which is. First step, of course: download and install the OneNote client.

Nothing complicated about that, right? The installer quit midway with a cryptic error message. Tried again: same result. Well, no time to mess with this now, I'll come back to it later. Let me just check my email real quick and.whoa! Where's Outlook? The icon was gone from the Windows taskbar.

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I clicked into the Start menu and.whoa! Where's Office?

The entire suite had vanished. I clicked into Settings and found it still listed among my installed programs, so I tried the Repair option. Same error the installer threw.

Reboot, Repair, again: same error. Uninstall Microsoft Office: same error. So, basically, the simple act of trying to install a Microsoft product fully and irrevocably crippled another Microsoft product. In the end, I tracked down a Microsoft Fix-It that allowed me to uninstall Office. And you know what? I'm not reinstalling it. Not now, not ever.

Is Microsoft Abandoning Office For Mac Free For Students

Because I've had it up to here with this kind of nonsense (which is way politer word than I'd be using if this wasn't a family blog). A brief history of hating Office Earlier this week I was already feeling a bit insulted by, which gives you a single license (for one PC and one mobile device) for $70 - for one year. Yep, it's a subscription option, same as the newly rechristened Office 365 Home, which costs $100 and comes with five licenses. Uh, math isn't really my strong suit, but there's something amiss with those numbers.

Full disclosure: My Office 365 installation came courtesy of Microsoft, a one-year demo license for journalists. It expires next month, so I was already planning my Office exit, so to speak.

But for nearly a year I've been using Kingsoft Office Free 2013, which I consider the. It's pretty, capable, and more than sufficient for my everyday-user needs (which amount to word processing, occasional spreadsheets, and once-in-a-blue-moon presentation viewing). The alternative: pay Microsoft $70 or $100 annually for tools that are far beyond my needs - and that apparently crash and burn when you try to add a new one. The only reason I've continued using Office 2013 at all is Outlook, which is actually pretty nice in this version. Plus, I have a PST file containing years' worth of email. But just the other day it was producing oddball password-error messages for one of my Gmail accounts, even though I had no trouble signing into that account on the Web.

(This has happened, sporadically, for years with Outlook.) Kingsoft Office 2013 Free has nearly all the same features as Word, Excel, and PowerPoint - but it's free. Kingsoft But you know what? I can, and then just get used to Gmail's ugly Web interface. Or, because I'm kind of old-school when it comes to having a local e-mail client/information manager, I'll probably switch to the excellent. It's free for personal use and up to two mail accounts; the unlimited Pro version runs $49.95.

Wrapping up the rant I'm not saying this is the right solution for everyone. Office 365 does offer a pretty decent value if you need and fully leverage all the included tools (Publisher, Access, OneDrive, etc.), and $100 or $70 per year is hardly a fortune. But just for once I'd like to see Microsoft deliver a truly fair and affordable solution. How about Office 365 Basic: Give me Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook for $20 annually.

You keep Access, Publisher, and that incredibly generous 60 minutes of Skype calls (value: about 90 cents). Better yet, let me buy it outright for that price. I have no interest in subscribing to software.

That'll never happen, though, and Outlook isn't nearly enough to make me pay for any iteration of Microsoft Office. So, yeah, my broken Office installation was the straw that broke this cheapskate's back.

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For those that are subscribed to Office 365 Home, Microsoft has announced that they are updating the contract to allow more users to access the subscription, and they’re updating the installation limits as well. When Office 365 Home was first announced, it was $99/year and gave access to Office applications such as Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and more, plus additional OneDrive storage for each user. Although the amount of OneDrive space has changed, it’s currently 1 TB of OneDrive per person on the subscription. So in theory, you could have up to 5 TB of file stored in the cloud as well as the Office applications for up to five people.

Office was limited to 10 device installs total, and you could manage which devices were activated through the Office.com portal, but this is changing as well. Five of the devices could be PCs and the rest could be tablets or phones. Monday, September 03, 2018 - $69.99/year sounds pretty high for home use. Most people don't even need office at home, OpenOffice, LibreOffice or Google Docs is good enough for most uses. The bundled extras are OK, but can be had for significantly less elsewhere.

I mean $69.99, is about what I paid for a perpetual license of Office 2013 Home I bought 5 years ago, but you're paying yearly. How much do you have to use Office to make this worthwhile? And remember, this is for non-commercial use. You can't even use it for your home business. Tuesday, September 04, 2018 - How is this 'attractive'? Many of us have absolutely zero use for applications like Publisher and Outlook or the bundled Skype minutes.

I for one am glad FOSS alternatives provide literally everything I ever need (word processing with export to PDF/A, a random spreadsheet or presentation here and there, browsing and IMAP/POP3 email) and it has been this way for many years now. I've been using OOo before the LibreOffice fork (am on LibreOffice now) and Firefox/Thunderbird as Netscape Navigator replacement - all for $0.00 per year.

Tuesday, September 04, 2018 - The problem is that FOSS alternatives like LibreOffice don't play well on Windows tablets because the icons and UI are tiny. I end up making presentations in Libreoffice and exporting pptx files to view in the PowerPoint mobile app which has proper touch support. The Office mobile apps for Windows have a weird bug that allow you to edit and create files even without an Office 365 subscription, simply by signing in and viewing the subscription page. The edit functionality is enabled for a few days before you have to log in again.

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