nevertheless every one of the Web two.0 crowd seems to feel matters are Web-based workplace suites/services, there’s still a lot of life left in client-based productivity software from Microsoft and others. the Microsoft front, the Mac Business Unit released to manufacturing last week Office 2008 for Mac,
office pro plus x86 key, and plans to launch the product at Macworld in mid-January 2008. 2008 release of Workplace for Mac is optimized to take advantage of Leopard. From the Microsoft Mac Mojo blog: made some tremendous architectural changes to the (Workplace 2008 for Mac) product to take advantage of newer technologies in Mac OS X that have come out since Workplace 2004 was released to run on Mac OS X 10.2. Because of those changes, we’ve given seeds of Mac Office 2008 to Apple so that they can run their own tests against it. … We’ve been able to use this seeding time to make sure that Mac Workplace 2008 looks great on Leopard (picking up the new Leopard UI theme), works with new Apple technologies like Time Machine,
microsoft office 2007 Ultimate serial, Spaces, WebKit 3,
discount office 2007 Professional, AppleScript (ok, AppleScript isn’t new itself, but Apple made some big changes under the hood), and cooperates with lots of other smaller changes in various parts of the OS.” on the ABM (Anything But Microsoft) front,
win 7 home premium generator, Sun is going to start offering paid support for OpenOffice. Sun’s support plan, which starts at US$20 per user per year, will be offered to companies that distribute OpenOffice.org, not directly to end-users, according to a PC World report. now, Sun supported only StarOffice, which is primarily based on the Open
Office code base,
win 7 serial key sale, but not identical to it. Under the new support deal, which is slated to be announced on December 17, Sun is not offering to indemnify OpenOffice. Sun’s support plan give the same kind of boost to OpenOffice that Microsoft’s technology deal with Novell gave to SuSE Linux? I’m doubtful. You?