Office 2007 Is Off-Putting
Opinion: The suite's new features may seem unnecessarily complex, but history suggests users will get over it.
When our family room PC swung at its third and final strike a year ago, with failure to boot signaling the "Youre out!" instance of needing to reinstall Windows 98, I decided to get my teenage sons something more modern than the 400MHz Compaq Presario that had been their workhorse for seven years. An iMac seemed the obvious choice: Mac OS X is a solid foundation for multiuser sharing of a system, while Apples iLife suite is clearly ideal for school projects. What I found myself installing soon thereafter, though, was a new Dell PC running Windows Media Centerbecause my sons werent nearly as interested in Apples technical upside as they were leery of relearning skills that theyd mastered in what they call Wordby which they mean Word for Windows. Most users dont even know theres a need to specify. Yes, theyve seen the OS X version of Office, and a beautiful piece of work it is, too. But its different, and my real-world, real-user sons have a clear understanding that "different" entails a big deduction from "compatible" or even from "better." Speaking of which, how about that Office 2007?
Click here to read more about what Office 2007 has to offer.
Unlike the vast majority of PC users, its actually part of my job to explore alternative ways of doing a jobinstead of just using the tools that Im given and speaking up only if they prove inadequate. I therefore take some pains, for example, to compose online columns with a simple HTML editor and to use a variety of programmers editors and other tools that keep my mind open.
Even so, I use 800-pound-gorilla Word for some pretty simple tasks. I take interview notes more quickly with Word, since it corrects my simple typos on the fly. Is that something I need? No, but it makes me more productive. Is it worth the computational cost? If not today, Moores Law says it will cost less tomorrow.
Microsoft will take a lot of flak for the changes its introducing in Office 2007some of it from me. Over the past two decades, though, the mainstream application market seems to have voted in favor of getting over the hump of habit and using cheap hardware to give more help to expensive people. Id be betting against the smart money if I said that Office 2007 wasnt the next step in that direction.
Peter Coffee can be reached at peter_coffee@ziffdavis.com.
WWWeb Resources
Focused to a fault?
Users are masters of ignoring what doesnt matter:
go.eweek.com/ignore Window of opportunity?
Office competitors may find warmth in the winter of users discontent:
go.eweek.com/zero Many faces of friendliness
A task mix alters perception of how many features are "too many":
go.eweek.com/features
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