Categories
Search

Posts Tagged ‘Microsoft Office’

Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac Special Media Edition

Saturday, March 7th, 2009

Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac Special Media Edition




For media-savvy Mac users and professionals working with libraries of images, video, music, and digital assets, the reinvented Office 2008 for Mac experience with Expression Media achieve simple life digital asset management.

User Ratings and Reviews

2 Stars Disappointing
I have been an avid Mac user since 1987, and for many years I took great pride in the fact that I had NOTHING by Microsoft on my computer. That had to change when I started getting a lot of business email attachments in Word and couldn’t open many of them. I had Office 2004 for Mac on my computers and decided to upgrade when this 2008 suite became available. I was also very interested in Media Expression since I have more than 3000 photos in my iPhoto, and it is becoming increasingly more difficult to find specific photos in a hurry. I also have a huge sheet music library as well as thousand of recordings and several hundred books and would like to update my cataloging system. I don’t do spreadsheets or presentations and am happy with Mac Mail, so I really don’t have much interest in the other components of Office.

Word is an excellent word processing program with lots of handy features, but it is VERY slow to load on both my iMac (just upgraded to 768 MB of RAM) and my MacBook (1GB of RAM), which is much newer. Once Word opens, it really slows down the systems on both computers. Pages from iWork 2008 has most of the same features, loads faster, and I find it much easier to use. For quick and/or informal word processing documents, I find myself going back to the trustworthy bare bones Appleworks 6. So, after playing with Word on both computers many times, I am not sold on it as an improvement to anything I already have - except for opening and editing Word documents that come to me via email.

I spent a couple of hours this morning viewing tutorials and experimenting with Expression Media, but I couldn’t get it to work. I tried importing photos from iPhoto, and my screen showed that the import was happening (while making a thumping noise for each new photo it supposedly imported), but then I couldn’t find the upload anywhere. I did a thorough search of my computer, but I couldn’t find the upload. I decided to try it again by dragging and dropping folders as the tutorial suggested, and nothing would stick. So, even with the tutorials, I don’t find this program at all intuitive. It looks like a useful program, but I can’t make heads or tails of it at this point. I’ll fool with it some more, and if I figure out how to use it, I’ll edit my review. I’m very disappointed that I can’t easily organize my files to make individual assets easier to find, but will keep trying. Or maybe I’ll just stick with iPhoto and organize that a little better.

5 Stars Comprehensive Software
Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac Special Media Edition

This is far superior to the Mac iWork suite. MS Office is much more comprehensive in functionality and ease of use. Still Office 2008 has a number of differences from the older versions and take a little adjustment to get used to.

3 Stars Not as easy as 2004.
Notable faults I’ve noticed:

-Layout settings are not as defined as 2004.

-Numbering function for thesis papers does not work properly.

-Searching takes long when you are editing templates.

-When editing, all text boxes are selected instead of the one you are trying to fix.

-Trying to change your type size or font is not as clear cut as the previous format palate.

-Layout features are not easy to manage as the older version for creating a book layout.

Pluses over previous version:

-A lot more word art, text shadowing options, and selections in coloring backgrounds.

- Even though every element has its own text box, this version tries to emulate a true page layout program.

- More features and options are available

You will need a lot of time to become accustom to using the new menu layout and options Microsoft has added to this new office product.

-

3 Stars The Expected Microsoft Mediocrity
Microsoft Office is essentially impervious to reviews. It’s market share, an unfortunate consequence of monopolistic sales techniques and mediocre software design and development, means that a huge number of people have to use it in order to maintain clear, consistent, successful and relevant communication and collaboration with friends, peers, colleagues and the public at large. So, many of you have it or will have it, no matter its quality.

And what is that quality? Mediocre, as usual, and a step back in a vital way from Office for Mac 2004. That step back has been described by myriad others, so I’ll simply put it that removing support for macros is a decision that has no basis in the desire to produce a good, useful product. Perhaps it improved margins?

I’ll also add the caveat that I will not touch on Power Point - it’s existence is antithetical to what I consider is good and effective communication and thought and so I do not use it for anything other than viewing presentations that I simply cannot ignore. That being said, to the suite of programs itself:

Word is perhaps the most used in the suite, and certainly the most used word processing application. Yes, it does the job effectively and even powerfully, it is feature heavy - you can write a shopping list or an indexed and footnoted tome with it. You can do the same with Nisus writer as well, for cheaper, and with a faster launch time, more responsive typing and less intrusive spelling and grammar correcting, themselves so trapped in rigid and archaic ideas of ‘proper’ writing as to be nothing but an incredible annoyance. But, it’s Word, so what are you going to do? The default save format of .docx is another irritation, but Microsoft’s philosophy is all about making a task take five steps when it should take two.

Excel does not support old Macros, but does support Apple script. Terrible idea - but it is a spreadsheet program, and effectively does spreadsheet things. Installation of the full set of functions is again a hassle, require the initial loooooonnnnnngggggg installation, then an add-in finding procedure.

Entourage is the bright spot, a program Windows users should envy. If you only need an email application, it’s overkill, but it is an excellent project organizer and can bring together people and information of all kinds under one folder, heading, schedule, etc. Almost worth the price of the suite itself, and a success perhaps because it is a Mac application from the beginning, not an adaptation of a bad product that, once launched, could not be reworked.

The Expression Media browser is a bust. The task it performs, once seen, is underwhelming, and the implementation and user set-up is buggy. You’ll need more than once pass for it to actually build a media library, for example.

So, what’s it worth? If you need it, it doesn’t really matter how good or bad it is, it’s the cost of doing business. The current price of around $159 is relatively fair. Entourage is a good product, Excel is necessary if you’re working in business at all. Apple’s own iWork is much cheaper, and it’s spreadsheet program is as good for the home user. Other Word processing applications like Nisus and Pages are superior to Word, I feel, but if document compatibility has to be flawless for you, than you’ll need Office, no matter what. Business practices, not quality, have led us to this unfortunate state.

4 Stars MS Office 4 stars, Expressions 3 stars
I don’t want to waste readers’ time by talking about the core MS Office programs. You either know you want them or you don’t. I use Excel and it’s fine, although not user friendly in my opinion. Word is fine, but a bit bloated and I usually just need TextEdit for most of my needs. Still, I’ll give Office 4 stars.

The standout application in this package is Expressions Media, a media organizing tool that Microsoft actually didn’t develop itself and bought from another company. I give it 3 stars.

Pros

Organizes all media

Powerful import function

More powerful than Adobe Bridge

Cons

Expressions 1.0 came with Office and upgrading to current 2.0 was NOT intuitive

Just not as elegant or easy to use as Adobe Bridge, Lightroom or Apple Aperture

Most positives not relevant for users who are just starting, have one source of images, etc.

There are several programs for this type with Adobe Lightroom and Apple Aperture probably being the biggest players. Adobe Bridge, which comes with Adobe Elements and the full Photoshop program, is also a minor competitor,

What separates Expressions from the other programs is that it catalogs and organizes all forms of media, not just photos. I’m not aware of any program, certainly not by a major software company, that has this broad a focus. The majority of my files are photos so I’m going to focus on just that. Also, I have never used Adobe Lightroom so I can’t do a comparison other than price and basic functions.

I have photos from multiple sources scattered all over my hard drive. This includes shots from half a dozen or more digital cameras, scans from 35mm negs and slides, and some downloads. I have Photoshop Elements 6.0 which is great at tweaking these shots. The included Bridge program that comes with it, however, is severely lacking. This is where I found Expressions kicked in as a powerful option. The import function was encompassing and surprisingly fast. It was able to pull thousands and thousands photos from all over the hard drive in just a minute or so. Bridge simply couldn’t do this. Aperture took at least a half hour to do the total import.

Expressions is not an image editing program. Neither is Adobe Bridge. Aperture and Lightroom do have editing capabilities. So once you have organized your shots you have to interact with a program that does edit. This was easier than expected. Click on “Action” on the top menu bar, scroll down to “Open with . . .” and click on the appropriate program. It’s not as integrated or elegant as Adobe Bridge, for obvious reasons, but it’s functional and only adds a second or two to your process. Unexpectedly, this step in Aperture requires a little bit more work as you have to go into the preferences to set up your editing program so that it’s available in the pull down edit menu.

My first complaint about Expressions was that MS included version 1.0. I received this software in late 2008 and Expressions 2.0 was released in early 2008 so Microsoft had plenty of time to, at minimum, include upgrade instructions. There were none with my software. I didn’t even know that 2.0 had been released until I went online and did some research. I had to read another user’s review to find out what process to use to get the latest edition. This is just outrageous and why I generally dislike MS.

My second complaint is just the general interface. I have Aperture and there’s no way I would switch to Expressions. Aperture imports all your folders whereas Expressions just imports the media which means you have to organize everything. This could be a long process if you have a lot of photos. Aperture also displays quality thumbnail images at the bottom of the screen for the folder you’re working in with a single enlarged image above. Maybe Expressions allows for this, but I couldn’t make it work that way. I only saw two options: Single image or all thumbnails. The Aperture approach is definitely the better way.

The biggest question facing buyers is whether they need or want this program at all or if they should just by MS Office without this extra program.

Those who probably or definitely won’t need:

Owners of Lightroom or Aperture

Users who don’t take that many photos

Users who have only once source of photos and thus already have a tightly integrated system between Photoshop/Elements and Bridge.

Those who might want to give this program a look:

Users with photos from multiple sources

Users who need to organize multiple types of media

Users who already own a version of Photoshop and need to upgrade Office

Users who need MS Office and are on a tight budget and can’t afford Aperture or Lightroom.

I really can’t recommend Expressions as someone with thousands and thousands of images. Aperture and Lightroom are simply better programs. But if the money is tight and you must have MS Office this might be an acceptable option since the entire suite is about the same price of either Aperture or Lightroom.

Buy/More Info

Microsoft Office Excel Home and Student 2007

Monday, February 16th, 2009

Microsoft Office Excel Home and Student 2007




Excel Home and Student 2007 has the improved tools that help you create documents faster, easier, and more intuitively. Reduce the time and frustration of learning new software with menus and commands that present the right tools when you need them. The improved Help system provides tooltips and links to relevant information in Microsoft Office system programs or on the Internet when connected. Get started easily by using online tutorials with step-by-step instructions or by using some of the new out-of-the-box templates. Detect and remove unwanted comments, hidden text, or personally identifiable information in your documents using the Document Inspector New support for PDFs and XML files — convert and share them on any platform

User Ratings and Reviews

4 Stars Excel’s New Format
I’ve only been using this new version of Excel for several days, but it clearly deserves at least 4 stars. It’s much more user-friendly than my previous version of Excel and offers additional features, but it takes a little getting used to. There is tons of stuff at the top, and lots of tabs through which to navigate. But it seems to be well worth getting to know.

Buy/More Info

Microsoft Office Outlook 2007 with Business Contact Manager

Friday, February 13th, 2009

Microsoft Office Outlook 2007 with Business Contact Manager




Microsoft Office Outlook 2007 with Business Contact Manager offers powerful customer and contact management to help you save time, improve sales and marketing, and deliver better customer service. Organize and manage all your contact, prospect, and customer information in one place. Track leads and opportunities throughout the sales cycle. Easily create, personalize, and track direct marketing campaigns in-house, and centralize your project-related information so you can stay organized and monitor tasks with automated reminders. Forecast sales and analyze data using flexible reports. Share information easily and more securely with multi-user access

User Ratings and Reviews

1 Star Lead a stray
The business contact manager info on your website did NOT give any idea that one would need to buy a subscription to make the business Contact Manager function.

I NEVER would have paid extra for this feature if I knew it would incur additional MONTHLY costs!!!!

1 Star Outlook and BCM do not share contact information
Outlook with Business Contact Manager is a misnomer. BCM is in reality a bolt-on application that works alongside Outlook with a similar file structure. This would be a fine arrangement except that Outlook and BCM do not integrate together. For example, contacts with the same name in both Outlook and BCM are different contacts and do not share information nor do they synchronize in any way. I use a hosted Outlook Exchange service that keeps my desk and mobile email and contacts synchronized. When I moved a contact from Outlook to BCM I lost visibility of that contact through Exchange and the contact became visible only through my desktop. This is an unacceptable backward step. I just wasted the hundred bucks I spent on the Outlook with BCM application. As best I can tell, the best contact manager/CRM systems are now the web 2.0/hosted applications such as Salesforce, Zoho, Sugar, etc. I suggest using one of them. Good luck.

2 Stars Better Off Staying with Older Version
I’ve had the new version of Outlook for a few months now and have been quite disappointed in it’s entire performance. I purchased the version with the business contact manager in order to sync with my Quickbooks information. It turns out it only works with Microsoft’s “Money” application. So I decided to keep using it and take advantage of the few usable features I found in it.

To my further disappointment my Word 2002 began freezing if I had Outlook open. I finally had to upgrade to the Office Suite that included the Outlook 2007 as well.

But my problems did not stop there I tried using the program to receive my Gmail and after downloading my messages and attempting to answer the program freezes. This is using the IMAP format. I’ve gone over my settings a number of times and checked out my online Gmail settings as well. It turned out that the bug was improved by eliminating my online Gmail folders then sorting the mail into Outlook folders once I received it in Outlook. I run an Home XP OS on my laptop.

In a nutshell, not enough bang for the buck. Best to maintain older 2002 version or buy the entire suite. It may be pretty, but so was my last useless secretary!

1 Star BCM not really
ZERO STARS***Outlook with BCM is not really a contact manager at all it is just Outlook with a seperate database attached. What is interesting and frustrating is that the software moves from being Outlook to BCM. If you drag and drop a BCM contact onto the calendar and then open the entry it opens as a “Contact” not “BCM Contact” so the options available revert to those of a contact for example you cannot create a history item from the screen that opens even though it was a BCM contact! The calendar will not allow you to click on a line item and open the scheduled BCM contact (or any contact for that matter) a huge drawback! So your calendar line item will say “call Joe” but when you open the line item it takes you to a worthless screen not to Joe’s BCM contact info. Better off to stick with Sage’s horrible version of ACT then BCM which is just a waste of time. Sad very sad.

2 Stars Less Features, More Cumbersome
Very little change, less features (does not support animated gif’s or stationary).

Outlook 2007 now uses Microsoft Word as its rendering engine for all incoming emails. In Outlook 2003 (and earlier), email with animated gif’s would look great, because it uses Internet Explorer to render the emails, leaving the HTML alone. However, in Outlook 2007, Microsoft Word literally rewrites your beautiful HTML into Word-like HTML, leaving out the creative touches that used to be available until Outlook 2007.

So why buy Outlook 2007?

Buy/More Info

Microsoft Office Home and Student 2007 Medialess License Kit for System Builders 1 pack LICENSE ONLY

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

Microsoft Office Home and Student 2007 Medialess License Kit for System Builders 1 pack LICENSE ONLY




Specification Mfr Part Number: 79G-00916 Features: Get better results faster with a new streamlined user interface. Create high-quality documents you can be proud of. Preview your changes quickly. Organize notes and information for your personal projects, tasks, and to-do lists so you can get things done. Visualize key data trends using conditional formatting. Remove private information from the documents you want to share. Have better control and predictability when formatting documents. Create and save custom slide layouts for use in later presentations. Help ensure broader distribution of your documents and presentations. Find the Help you need to get started. Office Home and Student 2007 Includes: Excel 2007 PowerPoint 2007 OneNote 2007 Word 2007 System requirements: Computer and processor: 500 megahertz (MHz) processor or higher Memory: 256 megabyte (MB) RAM or higher Hard disk: 1.5 gigabyte (GB); a portion of this disk space will be freed after installation if the original download package is removed from the hard drive. Drive: CD-ROM or DVD drive Display: 1024×768 or higher resolution monitor Operating system: Microsoft Windows XP with Service Pack (SP) 2, Windows Server 2003 with SP1, or later operating system Package: OEM 1-Pack COA license only, No media

Buy/More Info

About Snap Shots
Sometimes Snap Shots bring you the information you need, without your having to leave the site, while other times it lets you "look ahead," before deciding if you want to follow a link or not.

Enhanced with Snapshots

Should you decide this is not for you, just click the Options icon in the upper right corner of the Snap Shot and opt-out.