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Office 2010 Release Candidate out
Posted on February 3rd, 2010 at 07:11 1 commentIf you’re one of the select few in Microsoft’s TAP (”Technology Adoption Program”) you may have been offered a chance to run Office 2010 RC 1.
Ars Technica has the scoop:
“Microsoft made a release candidate available to members in the Technology Adoption Program (TAP),” a Microsoft spokesperson confirmed with Ars. “This is one of Microsoft’s planned milestones in the engineering process; however they do not have plans to make this new code set available broadly.”
… The Office 2010 beta that Microsoft gave out to the public three months ago was build 14.0.4536.1000 and has already been downloaded over 2 million times. Since then, and even before then, there have been many leaks of other builds; the latest one we’ve seen is build 14.0.4734.1000, which leaked out only last week
UPDATE: Neowin reports that the RC version (Build 4734.1000) is now available to all Technical Beta participants. No, if I was in the beta, I couldn’t tell you. But Neowin can.
One response to “Office 2010 Release Candidate out”
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MS’s push to introduce MS 2010 may well backfire.
True, a lite feature-poor or time-limited version may be included in future versions of Windows or for free download, a bundling and giveaway strategy which almost let IE bury Netscape and caused major antitrust lawsuits at the opening of this decade.
However, Office 2010 has two major features that users hate:
1) the “ribbon” interface, and
2) an increasing reliance on a feature MS loves, but we should hate: increasingly mandatory connection to the Internet, for updates, anti-piracy DRM, “cloud” storage, and (for free versions) the possibility of eventual free versions powered by advertising in banners that appear in the toolbar.
Unless MS backs away from these two bits of unfriendly programming, MS is genuinely driving us into the arms of OpenOffice.org.
Let’s face it: for people enamored of Office2003 and earlier versions, OpenOffice is a much easier and natural upgrade. The menus and functionality in OpenOffice are almost identical to those of MS Office 2003, except for a bit of feature reduction in OpenOffice’s spreadsheet’s ability to make pictographs from data tables.
When I worked at Toyota’s world headquarters a few years ago, Toyota’s worldwide standard was MS Office 2000…except that I was allowed to use OpenOffice.org, and found almost no problems in compatibility. I even found that, disarmingly, sometimes I’d mistakenly open one and think I was in the other!
Since we’re in harsh economic times and it’s increasingly hard to keep up with software makers’ DRM games, smart users will increasingly turn to mature, safe, always-free open source products like OpenOffice.org.
OpenOffice.org is well-placed to step in and take over, if MS chooses to continue making light of consumers’ wishes.
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