Here's a quick and interesting article for the list.
http://www.businessinsider.com/microsoft-you-can-absolutely-run-office-14-on-windows-xp-2009-3
Microsoft: You Can Absolutely Run Office 14 On Windows XP (MSFT)

By and large, big business has shunned Windows Vista, and the big question 
for Microsoft (MSFT) over the next year is: Will the enterprise upgrade to 
(and buy hundreds of thousands of licenses for) Windows 7, or will they 
stick it out with XP for years to come?
Microsoft is hedging its bets. The team behind the next version of MS 
Office -- called "Office 14" inside Microsoft, no brand yet -- has insulated 
themselves against the very real possibility of low Windows 7 adoption 
rates: O14 will run on Windows XP, so it can be sold to corporate clients 
that shun 7.
That's what Microsoft Business Software SVP Chris Capossela told SAI in an 
interview yesterday about Office 14. Chris said:
Our install base of Office 2003 and 2007 is actually quite quite high in 
enterprises even if XP is what most enterprises are still using on their 
PCs.  We're looking at XP [for Office 14] with some service pack.  We don't 
think it makes sense to require only Windows 7 with a new version of Office.
And while Microsoft coordinated to introduce a new version of Office 
concurrent with the release of both Windows Vista and Windows XP, this time 
the Office team and Windows group are on totally seperate tracks: We can 
expect Windows 7 maybe as early as Sept, while Chris still wouldn't commit 
to first half of 2010 for Office 14. (CEO Steve Ballmer said last week 
Office 14 would be delayed until sometime next year.)
The way the Windows 7 and Office 14 teams are working independent of each 
other is something of a double-edged sword for Microsoft. It's good for 
Chris and his business group: They're working on all kinds of cool new 
cloud-based features for O14, and if those offerings are valued by 
Microsoft's customers it's great they can buy it whatever version of Windows 
they're on.
But here's the downside: By all accounts, Windows 7 is a conservative, 
bug-fixing release for Microsoft, with no radical new features other than 
"touch," something we still don't see any use cases for. We think there's a 
non-zero number of corporate customers that -- in deciding if the ROI on 
Windows 7 is there -- will ask Microsoft if they can still use the upcoming 
versions of Office, Exchange, and the rest with XP. And when they hear 
"yes," we think at least some of them may decide 7 isn't worth it. 


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