I know what you mean. My largest client's IT UBER-POLICY  steers way too many 
decisions in my home computing due to our client relationship. If I had *time* 
to do it, I'd go pick up all the networking and Cisco certs I could get my 
hands on, just so that I could get this stuff jiving the way I need it to work. 
They're rolling out Office 2007 on site, and most of the workers initially 
gripe about the interface but then find that it's more like hopping into a tub 
of hot water: if you sit there long enough, it doesn't *feel* hot anymore.

When I was helping my manager at that site configure his user interface, I saw 
a setting to use the "classic" office menus rather than the 2007 "ribbon" 
menus, and using that setting plus changing his default file type for save 
operations has helped him a lot. Me? Oh, I bought Office 2007 when I could get 
it from a friend as an OEM offering, loving the discount. Of course, now I find 
out that OEM means you can't ever upgrade that copy, so I'm starting to feel 
like I got taken, but hey, it's buyer beware, I guess.

It's hard to  figure out what's really going to work for me from a cost and 
productivity standpoint with so many variables and dependencies in play, 
knowing that the wrong decision would be a permanent pain in the kiester.


Rene L. Stephenson



----- Original Message ----
From: "Butler, Darren J CTR USAF AFMC 584 CBSS/GBHAC" 
<[email protected]>

 Our vehement petition for a stay of
execution may be ignored in favor of the IT UBER-POLICY, unless we can
come up with a compromise.

DJ Butler

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