Microsoft Office 2008
Created 2008-04-02 09:17

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Microsoft Office 2008
Posted 04/02/2008 at 11:17:25am | by Robert Strohmeyer
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Suite-Wide Features

The addition of the Elements Gallery features across the most-used apps makes Office 2008 far more usable than ever before. But the new default document formats are iffy at best.

 

Project Gallery

A familiar sight for current Office users. And not necessarily a welcomed one.

 

Like a vestigial tail or an appendix, the Microsoft Office Project Gallery is a long-suffering—and largely useless—element of the Office suite. Designed to let you quickly get started with a new document and manage your existing creations, this four-tabbed menu gives you a style-oriented view of the various templates you can choose from.

 

For those who have a hard time deciding which application to launch for a given purpose (duh, which one makes spreadsheets again?), Project Gallery takes the guesswork out of getting to work. It also gives you a one-stop shop for your recently created documents, regardless of which Office app you made them in. For most users, these features are superfluous to simply launching Word, Excel, or PowerPoint and getting down to business

 

New Document Format
In response to demand from various governmental organizations worldwide for an open document standard, Microsoft has changed the way Office saves its files. Microsoft Office Open XML (OOXML) is the new default file format for all apps in Office 2008 for Mac and Office 2007 for Windows. What this means to you is that you need to give some thought before clicking Save on a new document. Word’s new format, DOCX, is fundamentally different from the old DOC format you’ve been using for a decade, and older versions of Word won’t be able to open new DOCX files without first installing an update. Until everyone you know has either upgraded to Office ‘08 or installed the necessary update in their old version, saving in the new default format could be a bad idea. The same holds true for XLSX files in Excel and PPTX files in PowerPoint.

 

What this means on a larger scale is more difficult to say. The new OOXML format has met with fierce opposition from open standards advocates who say it’s too bloated, complex, and application-dependent for competing companies to implement (which makes it “open” in name only) and actually contains errors that could mess up your documents, such as getting the math wrong in your spreadsheets. At press time the new format had failed to receive approval from the International Standards Organization, which oversees such things. Make no mistake, though: with Microsoft’s persistence and the near-inevitability that Office 2008 for Mac and Office 2007 for Windows will be ubiquitous in a year or two, OOXML will most likely become the default standard for all documents, regardless of whether it ever gains approval from the ISO.

 

Microsoft Messenger

Office Messenger won’t replace iChat or Adium on the Mac anytime soon.

 

Love iChat? You’ll hate Microsoft Messenger. Microsoft just can’t resist bundling its own chat client into its Office suite, so don’t be surprised to find the Messenger icon in your Dock. Fortunately, Messenger doesn’t completely install by default, so you can just delete the icon and keep working if you don’t plan to use it. For our part, we know very few people in the U.S. who regularly use Microsoft Messenger; almost everyone we know is on iChat or AIM. We suspect this little add-on will do better in Europe, where Microsoft Messenger is all the rage.

 

Office 2008 Our Final Verdict

With its emphasis on making advanced features like charts and graphics readily accessible and easy to use, Office 2008 may be the first Microsoft product that seems to really get what Mac users want. The Elements Gallery makes Office 2008 not only more powerful than Apple iWork or Office 2004, but also simpler to work with. If you do only minimal work with your Mac, such as typing up the occasional letter or adding up a few columns in a spreadsheet, you probably don’t need to spend $400 to get Office 2008. If you do serious number crunching, write scholarly papers, or give presentations frequently, iWork just doesn’t come close to Office 2008’s capabilities.

 

COMPANY: Microsoft

CONTACT: www.microsoft.com/mac

PRICE: $399.95, $149.95 Home and Student Edition, $499.95 Special Media Edition

REQUIREMENTS: (Standard Edition) 500MHz G4 or later or Intel processor, Mac OS 10.4.9 or later, 512MB RAM, 1.5GB hard disk space

 

 

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Source URL: http://www.maclife.com/article/the_office_gets_a_makerover

Links:
[1] http://www.microsoft.com/mac
[2] http://www.maclife.com/article/iwork_gains_on_office_ipods_for_fire_victims_and_microsoft_fires_santa
[3] http://www.maclife.com/article/word_2008
[4] http://www.maclife.com/article/entourage_2008
[5] http://www.maclife.com/article/powerpoint_2008
[6] http://www.maclife.com/article/microsoft_excel_2008