Under the Hood of Office 12 348
An anonymous reader writes "ZDNet has posted an FAQ on Office 12, plus a quick preview of Office 12 pre-Beta 1. From the review: Microsoft Office 12.0 pre-Beta 1 drastically revamps the interface layouts of Word, Excel, PowerPoint and Access. More than a year before the final product will hit the shelves, a pre-beta version of Microsoft Office 12.0 is revealing radical interface changes and user paradigm shifts that recall the overly ambitious Microsoft Office 97 update of the past."
Clippy? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Clippy? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Clippy? (Score:3, Funny)
BALLMER: Where is Clippy? Is he safe, is he all right?
GATES: I'm afraid he died. ... it seems in your anger, you killed him.
BALLMER: I couldn't have! He was alive! I felt him! He was alive! It's impossible! NOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!
Re:Clippy? (Score:5, Funny)
Interesting times ahead...
Re:Clippy? (Score:2)
GATES: I'm afraid he died.
BALLMER: Hmmmm.... was it tacked onto some chair??
Re:Clippy? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Clippy? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:In Other Words (Score:3, Funny)
You should try modelsim sometime.
Competition driving innovation (Score:5, Insightful)
Interesting tightrope Microsoft is being forced to walk here...if they don't change things enough, they still have OpenOffice and StarOffice nipping at their heels, but if they change too much, they risk alienating their established user base.
The real question is: Just how much can you improve an office suite, before it's 'good enough'? Many Office users (my employers included) feel Office 2003 is just fine, and have no plans whatsoever for Office 12. Other offices I've seen have standardized on Offive XP, or even Office 2000, and steadfastly refuse to upgrade. When these holdouts finally do upgrade, it's only because they are having issues with using documents from other facilities that are in the new format (non-backward-compatible by design...thank you so much, Bill), and when they do, they commonly skip at least one release.
The bottom line is that the strategy of staying out ahead of competitors like OpenOffice and StarOffice is becoming increasing untenable as the office suite becomes more and more complex and capable, and closer and closer to the ideal of 'good enough' for the average user.
Re:Competition driving innovation (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Competition driving innovation (Score:5, Informative)
And to head all of the jokes about bugs that I'm paying for, I'm saying that Office is better.
Re:Competition driving innovation (Score:5, Interesting)
Only tried it for 5 minutes? That does not seem like long enough for a good evaluation.
I'm an author (nothing good on TV, so might as well write
Yes, I do own Office licences for Windows and OS X, but I find that OOo just stays out of my way so I can get my work done.
I also very much like the drawing program for technical figures.
Give it another try
-Mark
Re:Competition driving innovation (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Competition driving innovation (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Competition driving innovation (Score:3)
So only apps that cost you money are worth using? On the other side, do you have any idea much money and man hours have been put into that Free product?
I've yelled till I was blue in the face that if you need 100% MS Office compatiblity don't even bother with OO.org. But if that's not the case then its a pretty dam good Office suite. Certainly capable of handling 95% of the tasks that users need. Sure there is that 5% that have built their lives around certain MS Office only
Re:Competition driving innovation (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Competition driving innovation (Score:5, Interesting)
Indeed. I used to work for an extremely large company in Australia - they are still standardised on Office 97 on Windows NT.
They see no business motive to change - and frankly, I think they're taking the right approach. If they wait long enough, they will be able to "jump sideways" as it were to a completely open solution, with no loss in functionality and vastly improved management.
Past good enough for most users. (Score:5, Insightful)
What I really wonder is why no big PC companies like Dell, IBM, or Gateway are including OpenOffice with their PCs?
Seems like a brain dead way to give your customers a free office suit. I guess the answer is they are all hoping to sell you MS Office.
Maybe Gateway/Emachine should think about it.
Re:Past good enough for most users. (Score:3, Insightful)
I keep forgetting that people actually call for support for things like word.
Re:Past good enough for most users. (Score:3, Insightful)
That is one of the things that I do not like about windows machines. Out of the box they are useless. I can not surf the net safely, I can not do a simple spreadsheet, I can not write a program until I put a lot of other programs on my system.
Why the heck doesn't Windows come with at least Perl of even Basic? That is one thing I think most Linux distros do out of the box.
Where is the innovation? (Score:3, Insightful)
Companies around me have stuck with Office 97 for docs and use the Mozilla range for mail and internet. IE and OE are too buggy and bloated - and more easily replaced than Office. In a year's time, Open Office 2 should stabilise and remove the
Changes to management and office structures (Score:2)
Re:Competition driving innovation (Score:5, Insightful)
I can tell you that there is great room to improve Excel, good as it is. Many statistical functions in Excel need work in addition to addressing the poor memory limits - and I don't mean a marginal bump as is common with most Excel upgrades. Someday I'd also like to be able to address more than 65,536 rows and 256 columns.
Threading in Excel is poor! Admittedly this is not an issue for your average user.
So basically Microsoft will only marginally update Office for power users needing an extra speed or function fix and totally rework the GUI for the newbies to gawk at. Unfortunately this is a good business move if your business is to simply make as much money as possible from upgrades.
Same-named files (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Competition driving innovation (Score:3, Insightful)
Many statistical functions in Excel need work in addition to addressing the poor memory limits - and I don't mean a marginal bump as is common with most Excel upgrades. Someday I'd also like to be able to address more than 65,536 rows and 256 columns.
Or maybe you should try to use the right tool for the right job. That much data in one spreadsheet? Say hello to mister Relational Database! Statistical functions? Enter SPSS or similar programs that are explicitly intended to handle such stuff.
Threading in Exc
Re:Competition driving innovation (Score:4, Informative)
I know it's easier to use a tool that you already know than to learn a new tool but it's time for spreadsheet users to grow up. You really need a relational database.
Re:Competition driving innovation (Score:2)
In terms of features, Office already has too much. Their reportedly biggest problem is that users are unable to find features already present. For you and me which probably consider ourselves powerusers this is of little relevance, I certainly haven't felt that problem (nor do we feel it in most "designed-by-geeks" OSS software, not that all OSS software is like that). If this new interface is something the averag
Re:Competition driving innovation (Score:4, Insightful)
History repeating itself? (Score:2)
The real question is, how many people said that about Office 97 then upgraded to Office 2000, or Office XP, or Office 2003?
Damien
Office 97 is still good enough for me... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Office 97 is still good enough for me... (Score:3, Insightful)
though, unless you absolutely need it, it's best to stay away from office altogether. it'll only add to your problems. even if OO and other FOSS programs aren't as good, they won't change the file fo
Office 97 - no license key (Score:3, Informative)
RIP (Score:2)
RIP Clippy
Re:RIP (Score:5, Funny)
I want it to suffer eternal torment in the fires of silicon hell, where daemons will flay it continally until the end of time.
"It looks like you're trying to inflict agonies beyond belief on me, would you like so.... aaargh, no, no, stop with the poker! Anything but the poker, pleeeaase!"
But that's just me.
Re:RIP (Score:4, Funny)
Re:RIP (Score:2)
Shouldn't that be RITITBFOH* Clippy?
*Rest in torment in the burning fires of Hell
UI changes..? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:UI changes..? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:UI changes..? (Score:2)
Almost everything added to MS Office over the last 10 years or so has been an attempt to make the software easier to use and to reduce training costs. But at the same time, there's a lot of old fundemental UI problems which they have refused to fix because of training considerations. (Such as the modal super-tabbed dialogs from 1994).
Meanwhile, OpenOffice 1.x (haven't seen 2.0) strongly resembles your average 1995 menu-heavy Window
Re:UI changes..? (Score:2)
If you're the average user... You'll chose the "prettiest" one.
And I'm not even trying to be funny here.
hrm... (Score:2, Offtopic)
Why do I get the feeling that we won't actually see this product until after I have my masters degree.....in 2008?
Nothing beats Office 97 (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Nothing beats Office 97 (Score:3, Interesting)
Sadly my reason for upgrading was a microsoft trick, somehow a computer prebundled with office 2000 absolutly REFUSED to install 97 (tried and tried some more). In retrospect I shoulda reinstalled computer from scratch, but the upgrade was good anyways.
Wrong! (Score:2)
Nothing will ever top edit.com from the old MS-DOS days! Billy G and the crew should give it up. Long live edit.com!
Re:Nothing beats Office 97 (Score:2)
Just search for the section titled Outlook 2003 Security here [microsoft.com] and you might be shocked by the stuff former editions didn't have. The executable attachment blocks and address book protections can be invaluable in new virus outbreaks.
Of course, a virus shouldn't even *get there* if the us
Awesome new feature!! (Score:5, Funny)
This has got to be the most innovative thing to come out of Microsoft in years.
Re:Awesome new feature!! (Score:5, Informative)
It is one of those That is *so* obvious features that ends up in every product because it is just so *DUHHH* after someone popularises the concept.
Re:Awesome new feature!! (Score:4, Interesting)
Whooosh! (Score:5, Funny)
Not that I ever use Powerpoint, honest...
This will call for extra training (Score:5, Insightful)
The trouble here is that more of technology pundits will not see this requirement as an additional cost burden at all! So when it comes to comparing Office 12 to StarOffice/OpenOffice.org, assumptions will be made that those using M$ products already have the training.
StarOffice/OpenOffice.org programmers could capitalize on this, save companies the trouble or burden of training. This is not to mention licensing costs not forgetting closed and changing formats.
Screenshots (Score:5, Informative)
Microsoft's Screenshot [microsoft.com]
Zdnet series of screenshots [zdnet.co.uk]
Plus it takes loads of screen real-estate.
Re:Screenshots (Score:3, Insightful)
Just because you memorized where things can be located within the menus does not mean that this is more intuitive than just being shown the possible tasks in a graphically organized, dynamic manner.
And incase nobody has seen this yet, here is video [msdn.com]
Re:Screenshots (Score:3, Insightful)
It looks like this is going to be almost unusable on anything less that a 1280x1024 screen. As a laptop user, I dread this.
Where is office 11 ? (Score:2, Interesting)
There's good news but, Clippy is dead !!. But a ghost of the demon remains
What's new in Office 12
* Tabbed browsing
* Missing menus
* Clippy replaced with a Ghost
* Shortcuts change for no reason
* Task oriented design
Translated as
* Ripoff off Firefox
* Bye bye familiarity
* Transparency showoffs
* Alt keys are teh
Re:Where is office 11 ? (Score:3, Insightful)
There is a section in almost any HCI book you pick up explaining why Task Oriented Interface are a bad idea outside bespoke software for a particular workflow, and yet MS keeps putting them into general purpose tools and marketing them as a feature. Sometimes I wonder if their customers just count the number of ticks in boxes when evaluating their products, without reading the words next to the ticks.
Re:Where is office 11 ? (Score:2, Informative)
Office 2003 == Office 11
Re:Where is office 11 ? (Score:5, Insightful)
New feature -> Translated as:
And now appraoched in turn:
A mental exercise: Let's assume, for the sake of argument, that "not all users are idiots". Changing from a "functionality based" system to a "task based" system still has benefits:
Before anyone tries to "call me out", I am not a MS shill or apologist. (May be a KDE apologist, though).
Re:Where is office 11 ? (Score:2)
Until OO.org rips off MS Office once Version 12 has become familiar to users.
yawn (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:yawn (Score:2)
That is what docbook does, right? I mean, I haven't ever got docbook to do anything worthwhile, but I've been told that if it did work, that is what it would do.
Re:yawn (Score:2)
How much is relevant? (Score:3, Interesting)
An open, documented format - and I mean 100% open, not like the 65% shared source initiative from MS that means zilch to devleopers.
MS has to realise that the data in the document which I put in is much more valuable than the format in which it's stored. If I'm forced to use only MS tools to manipulate data in Office docs, it's not too exciting.
Recently, I searched for ways to update a VSS store from a remote location using a web interface. I learnt that the small 3rd party app needed to achieve this was ridiculously expensive, and crucially MS didn't have this component for it's own software. I'm now looking to change from VSS rather than getting a plug-in. More enterprise users would move away from Office if it sticks to proprietary patented stuff in the new version.
Re:How much is relevant? (Score:2)
?
Re:How much is relevant? (Score:2)
Did they actually fix the bugs? (Score:4, Interesting)
Is Office 12 just a UI rearrangement of the same defective code?
Hey dude, (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Hey dude, (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Hey dude, (Score:3, Informative)
Office 98 = Office 97 for Mac OS 9
Office 2004 = Office XP for Mac OS X
the comparisons are in feature sets and document formats, I don't believe there's much code in common.
Re:Did they actually fix the bugs? (Score:2)
So instead of people just sitting down and typing, it'll first ask you "where do you want to go today" and there will be only options.
More Info... (Score:4, Interesting)
Link directly to video http://download.microsoft.com/download/6/5/b/65b0
Pre-beta? (Score:2)
Re:Pre-beta? (Score:2)
Re:Pre-beta? (Score:2)
remember the argument for not cloning MS? (Score:2)
Except someone to change OpenOffice.org's new suite to look like MS Office's new suite as what happened with GimpShop.
See it here.... (Score:2)
Re:See it here.... (Score:2, Funny)
Upgrade Cost (Score:5, Funny)
Microsoft hasn't yet specified.
Translation: prepared to be raked over the coals for failing to upgrade from Office 97 for all these years. You don't think those dinosaur ads pay for themselves do you?
Desktop Real Estate loss (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm one of those guys with dual 19 inch moniters running at greater then 1280 by 720 resolution and I still don't have enough desktop area. It's a shame they are adding more onscreen buttons/tabs/menus to the interface, making the word processor more mouse dependant. They are also screwing with the shortcuts, messing up the Alt+ shortcuts. It is their software though, not mine, so they can do whatever they want, and I'll keep on with Open Office.
radical interface changes?! (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, if Office 12 has "radical interface changes" it appears to me that if it's going to require re-training, businesses might as well switch to an alternative now and save a fortune.
Undo past save? (Score:5, Interesting)
Does anybody know if they finally have undo past savepoints.
Because of my experience with MSO (been using since Excel 4.0) is that it is best to save the document ALL the time else the app will crash and you will loose hours of work. BUT when you save, you loose the undo history
MSO up to now has never had this feature (bad programmers BAD).
BTW - OOo has this feature in 2.0
God I love open source
JsD
OPEN OFFICE 2.x (Score:4, Interesting)
Where are those people today? The same ones that argued that it was not cost effective to retrain, will be arguing this is an incremental change or significant but worth the effort. I can hardly wait for Laura DiDio's "How Office 12 will make your company 12 times more productive" press release disguised as a "research paper."
As several prior posters have said, if you are going to take the upgrade hit, why not take it to open office? It will certainly be less expensive in both licensing and training. And it will support OpenDocument formats, something MS has said they will not do.
At least until the MS PR machine starts rolling.
Open Office Home page [openoffice.org]
Haha. (Score:2)
In other words, we get a UI that never stays the same, and I'll be forever searching for the damn option I want because it can't stay put. And they say microsoft doesn't innovate.
There have also been rumours of some new products, such as Excel server software
Whoa. That's brilliant. It can be more like a database, and store all sorts of worksheets and rows
Bad Analogy - "under the hood" (Score:2)
Technology is Fucked Up (Score:4, Interesting)
Two years from now, whoever is in charge in Office will stand up at some flashy Microsoft presentation and explain how they "ignored users" and "goofed" by changing too much in Office 12. He'll talk about "lessons learned" and how "grateful Microsoft is to the user community for their active support of Microsoft Office."
And then he'll push a couple buttons, curtains will raise, and some huge screen will blast "Office 13" and show videos about how all these new innovations have been replaced by the stuff that users wanted -- namely, a return to the regular menu.
I don't know -- after ten, fifteen years of Microsoft, I'm extremely, extremely weary of all this technological hullabaloo. It's a lot of noise about nothing except money -- big money -- and users -- myself included -- fall for it time and time again.
And yes, I've gradually moved over to Linux solutions. They're fine -- sometimes more complesxs than I'd like -- but I've come to understand that Microsoft -- and perhaps Google, too, but I don't know yet -- really don't understand technology. They understand technology, yeah, but they don't understand the fundamental fact that more and more people have an antagonistic response to technology. We like technology, sure, but goddammit make technology that makes things easier -- not complex in a different way.
I wish someone at these companies would begin to acknowledge the odd technological antagonism that more technology breeds. Just because you *can* do something doesn't mean you *should* -- create a new version of Word, implement X or Y, etc. etc.
I dunno. Whatever. It doesn't matter.
Pushing Vista (Score:5, Funny)
User Interfaces (Score:3, Interesting)
The key breakthrough that dropdown menus provided when they were introduced was simply that all the available functions (or function categories, at least) are visible, or at lease findable, you don't need to remember any text command (like a command line) or wierd control key combinations. It greatly simplifies things, but a GUI dropdown menu is no more effective in that way than the original Lotus 1-2-3 text interface - a '/' would bring up a top screen menu, which you could select in a similar fashion with keyboard only, no mouse. In fact, it had some advantages until Microsoft added the ALT-key method for accessing GUI menus.
The fundamental problem is that when menus get too complex, the options are no longer easily visible. You now have to remember where to activate a particular function - and you're back to memorizing things instead of having them in front of you, so you're back to the idea of commands. Only the command is a series of menu clicks, instead of keystrokes or words.
The problem isn't the use of menus, but the over use of them. The entire reason for the existance of GUIs is to allow direct manipulation of objects. The opportunity for ease of use from this is still only touched upon in many ways - especially by those who don't see any farther than stuffing menus full of functionality (similarly, if you've ever looked at the configuration options of a complex open-source project like NetBeans or KDE or Gnome, you'll see huge trees of incomprehensible options, often in a uniform structure that gives you no clue as to where to find the one you're looking for - you have to read, explore, read, explore until you stumble across the one you want). That functionality should go into direct manipulation of visible objects, not menus.
For example, in a word processor, mini icons representing paragraphs could be displayed in a margin. To change properties like interparagraph spacing, indent, style or following style, you'd click on the icon to open a control panel - instead of cursor somewhere into the text, then up to the menu bar and click on Format / Paragraph / Indents and Spacing. Another icon or option lets you select the paragraph style, or edit the style (some of this is already done, with a ruler control up top, with drag-and-drop tabs - good idea). The manipulation now takes place at the paragraph you're interested in itself, not far away in some abstraft menu tree.
Direct manipulation is the most overlooked, but by far the most powerful ease-of-use tool. The Macintosh and applications that run on it, go furthest by a wide margin in using direct manipulation, which is why users consider it so vastly easier to use, yet without loss of power. This is the real magic of GUIs and key to ease of use - it's not in "simplifying options", but providing those options in an absolutely direct and intuitive fashion.
Re:Why exactly is it called Office 12? (Score:5, Interesting)
From my blog dated a month ago:
"
Microsoft have been using internal numbers for their major Office release for some time:
Office 9 = Microsoft Office 2000
Office 10 = Microsoft Office XP
Office 11 = Microsoft Office 2003
And right now they are in pre-beta with Office 12... yet to be assigned a product name (or yet to be announced depending on whether you believe what you hear).
A curiosity though, I've just been conversing with a product manager in the globalisation team over a feature that the company I work for would dearly like, during this conversation she mentioned that the feature in question would not be in Office 12, but some part of it will be considered for Office 14.
Office 14? So what happened to Office 13?
Could it be that Microsoft are superstitious enough to not want to number a feature version of Office as Office 13?
Or am I reading too much into this, and did they just use Excel to do the numbering?
Maybe someone should point out to them that missing 13 doesn't make it any less Office 13.
"
Re:Why exactly is it called Office 12? (Score:5, Funny)
Obligatory Mitch Hedburg:
"My hotel doesn't have a 13th floor because of superstition. But people on the 14th floor, you know what floor you're really on.!"
"If 13 is an unlucky number, then 12 and 14 are guilty by association."
Re:Why exactly is it called Office 12? (Score:2)
To add to that (while we're on the subject of new and shiny things from Microsoft), Vista is NT 6.0. For anyone who hasn't been keeping up, Win2K was (still is, I reckon) NT 5.0, and WinXP is NT 5.1.
Re:Why exactly is it called Office 12? (Score:2)
Why are you assuming there won't be an Office 13? Maybe she means that the feature won't be implemented in the next two releases of Office. Gee, hope it wasn't too important...
Re:Why exactly is it called Office 12? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Why exactly is it called Office 12? (Score:2)
I can't remember on top of my head, but I recall a Word version 6. Plus Microsoft Office predates Win 3.1, as it existed on MacOS several years before Win 3.1 were even released.
Re:Why exactly is it called Office 12? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:"User Paradigm Shifts" ??? (Score:2)
I was wondering if someone had run that statement through Bullfighter [fightthebull.com] yet. I'm sure it would had some snide remarks about the paragraph.
Batch Files (Score:2)
Check it out [autoitscript.com].
Re:Bring back Word Perfect 5.0 (Score:2)
Now, you're not going to be able to use very much memory, and the size of the hard drives you can format will be sharply limited, but it should still work fine. As should WP 5.0... although getting a printer driver for a current printer might take some work.
If you truly don't need all those extra features, there's NOTHING keeping you from doing things th
Re:I want a copy! (Score:2)
Re:I want a copy! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:I want a copy! (Score:2, Informative)
There are some here [xbetas.com]
Re:I want a copy! (Score:2)