Hi :)
Only MS Office 2007 and 2010 are available on Mac.  They are re-named as 2008 
and 2011 but basically are pretty much the same.  However there are 
compatibility issues with documents produced on one platform and then viewed on 
the other.  Documents produced with 2007 don't always look at all right on 2010 
let alone 2011.  If produced in 2010 on Win Xp then even MS admits they wont 
look right on 2010 on Win7, nor Win8.  Their idea of 'compatibility' is that 
everyone must be using the same version on the same OS.  

Also while a student may not be considered to need various different parts of 
MSO it is still often claimed that moving away from MSO might be a bad idea for 
them because it means doing without those apps that are not even included in 
their version of MSO.  Then there are tons of other bundles that each lack 
different parts of the whole suite.  Again the missing parts are used as 
reasons why people can't migrate away from MSO.  

I have just been helping 2 students on courses that are allegedly trying to 
teach about computers and the Access module parts were particularly tricky as 
they didn't have Access at home despite having bought the version of MSO that 
the colleges recommended.  So many different bundles = so much confusion.  

Rtf is no longer being actively developed.  Also,  as is typical of MS formats, 
it fails to be compatible between different programs or even same programs on 
different OSes, let alone different platforms.  I've never yet met any office 
worker using Biff.  

Almost all serious servers run non-MS platforms.  Somewhere around 1%.  Mostly 
it's small company servers but again they tend to go with unix-based platforms 
because of security issues.  

Mobile devices seem to almost entirely run non-MS.  The Slate's sales have been 
appallingly lower than estimated.  The only person i know of that has run a 
Windows phone found it started crashing after just 2 weeks and at best is 
suffering slowdowns already.  

All the 3rd party tools for reading documents that are in MS formats  tend to 
be better at displaying LibreOffice documents because it's usually their native 
format too.    
Regards from
Tom :) 





>________________________________
> From: Urmas <[email protected]>
>To: [email protected] 
>Sent: Tuesday, 5 February 2013, 14:07
>Subject: [libreoffice-users] Re: Re: LibreOffice 4.0
> 
>"Tom Davies":
>
>On the other hand MS Office still does not support many features of 
>LibreOffice yet either.
>
>Like custom toolbar backgrounds? I think people can live without those.
>
>> For example the Student's version of MSO doesn't include Publisher or Access.
>
>Why does a student need Publisher? Why does they need Access when they can 
>have the real SQL server for free?
>
>>  Plus their default formats ... only really work on desktop machines.
>
>Both BIFF and RTF are trivially parsed and can be used on servers as well.
>
>> Will MSO ever catch up on security or cross-platform compatibility?
>
>There are third-party solutions which handle Office documents on mobile 
>devices. The two only desktop platforms, Windows and MacOSX are both using 
>MSO. What compatibility? 
>
>
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