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-   -   Loading Office 2010 over 2007 (https://www.flyertalk.com/forum/travel-technology/1124042-loading-office-2010-over-2007-a.html)

slawecki Sep 7, 2010 9:12 am

Loading Office 2010 over 2007
 
i was happy with office 2003, particularly after i learned how to efficiently find and run the 0.2% i needed. in March, Microsoft decided i had a bootleg corporate copy, and i could not find the disk. after two days of searching, i bought office 2007(3 license for $100). it came with an upgrade to 2010 when released. 2010 has been released and i was able to down load it. NOTE:finding the 2007 product code is a bear.

do i just overwrite 2007?. is 2010 a stable decent product? i overwrote 2003 with 07, and all seemed well.

adambadam Sep 7, 2010 10:13 am


Originally Posted by slawecki (Post 14615178)
i was happy with office 2003, particularly after i learned how to efficiently find and run the 0.2% i needed. in March, Microsoft decided i had a bootleg corporate copy, and i could not find the disk. after two days of searching, i bought office 2007(3 license for $100). it came with an upgrade to 2010 when released. 2010 has been released and i was able to down load it. NOTE:finding the 2007 product code is a bear.

do i just overwrite 2007?. is 2010 a stable decent product? i overwrote 2003 with 07, and all seemed well.

I have been using 2010 since the beta and I thought that was a fine product. It is a good improvement to the ribbon and it is nice to have the integrated online features. I think you will enjoy 2010

BearX220 Sep 7, 2010 10:34 am

I was forced into the 2010 upgrade owing to a client's format requirements for deliverables... I can say there's nothing really wrong with it, but some little things seem to have been altered or rearranged for no good reason, especially file folder management protocols and a new tab function on Word that doesn't make me any more efficient. You develop a sort of muscle memory around these applications and when things are changed just a little, it's like "Gaslight." You think you're going crazy.

slawecki Sep 7, 2010 11:16 am

i used 2003 for 7 years. all has been scrambled eggs since forced to go to 2007 in march. nothing will be lost by going to 2010.

92 degrees, high humidity. to hot for boating, so will load 2010. more to follow.

deubster Sep 7, 2010 11:31 am

You'll be fine. Not much to learn from 2007 to 2010, you've already suffered most of the learning curve.

My pet peeve with 2007 & 2010 is Outlook thinking if you give it an email address and pw, it can configure it for you. I've setup at least a dozen, never yet did it work - always had to go to the manual configuration. Which is fine, I just think it's stupid to include this.

mrx900 Sep 7, 2010 12:12 pm

just ordered 2010 via the Microsoft Home User Program.....offered at 21.95USD for the Office 2010 DVD......
Check with your HR dept if your employer participates in this ......a good deal IMO...

cblaisd Sep 7, 2010 3:59 pm

Microsoft's "upgrades" to 2003 are bloatware that took a relatively decent product (even though MS Word remains miles behind Word Perfect in terms of intuitiveness and ease of use. But that's another discussion) and too often made it unnecessarily frustrating.

We still happily run 2003 after having downloaded and run the Office Compatibility pack from MS. We can now open the later docx et al files and also write to that format.

AaronKamp Sep 7, 2010 10:28 pm


Originally Posted by cblaisd (Post 14617602)
Microsoft's "upgrades" to 2003 are bloatware that took a relatively decent product (even though MS Word remains miles behind Word Perfect in terms of intuitiveness and ease of use. But that's another discussion) and too often made it unnecessarily frustrating.

We still happily run 2003 after having downloaded and run the Office Compatibility pack from MS. We can now open the later docx et al files and also write to that format.

Try modifying a pivot table in a .xlsm ;)

Once I got past the learning curve of the ribbon (mostly where to find things) I do like 2010. I do not like the way database objects are handled in MS Access. They really f*cked it up and now everything opens in a container that mimics a tabbed browser. Thankfully it can be turned off, but it cannot be turned off by default and is DB specific. (http://databases.about.com/od/tutori...ccess-2010.htm)

JClishe Sep 8, 2010 8:40 am


Originally Posted by deubster (Post 14615966)
Which is fine, I just think it's stupid to include this.

You've obviously never deployed Outlook to tens of thousands of users :)

gomike Sep 9, 2010 8:00 am

Just take the plunge and get it over with. The sooner you do it the longer you will use it.

bdesmond Sep 11, 2010 6:57 pm

In place upgrade will go fine - just pop the disc in and follow the wizard.


Originally Posted by deubster (Post 14615966)
You'll be fine. Not much to learn from 2007 to 2010, you've already suffered most of the learning curve.

My pet peeve with 2007 & 2010 is Outlook thinking if you give it an email address and pw, it can configure it for you. I've setup at least a dozen, never yet did it work - always had to go to the manual configuration. Which is fine, I just think it's stupid to include this.

This functionality working depends on your email provider having done some work on their end. It works quite well if they do. This has been a huge feature for many corporate customers.

Landing Gear Sep 12, 2010 12:50 am


Originally Posted by slawecki (Post 14615178)
. . . I bought office 2007 (3 license for $100). it came with an upgrade to 2010 when released. 2010 has been released and i was able to down load it.

How can I get a deal like this? I can't even find a single component of Office (e.g. Outlook) for one user for $100 and you have an Office suite for three users?

I currently use Office 2007.

It appears that the cheapest version of Office 2010 I need (i.e. containing Word, Outlook, Excel and Powerpoint) is $280 for one user. http://store.microsoft.com/microsoft...s/category/213

So, again, can you share your secret?

slawecki Sep 12, 2010 8:09 am


Originally Posted by Landing Gear (Post 14642552)
How can I get a deal like this? I can't even find a single component of Office (e.g. Outlook) for one user for $100 and you have an Office suite for three users?

I currently use Office 2007.

It appears that the cheapest version of Office 2010 I need (i.e. containing Word, Outlook, Excel and Powerpoint) is $280 for one user. http://store.microsoft.com/microsoft...s/category/213

So, again, can you share your secret?

i bought it on amazon. today's amazon home and student (family pack)with disk price seems to be $121 for 2010. you might look into the details of the "free upgrade from 2007 to 2010" if that is still in effect, buy and load 2007, then get 2010 from there. be careful not to buy a code number only, unless you are confident that is not a problem

Landing Gear Sep 12, 2010 4:19 pm


Originally Posted by slawecki (Post 14643429)
i bought it on amazon. today's amazon home and student (family pack)with disk price seems to be $121 for 2010. you might look into the details of the "free upgrade from 2007 to 2010" if that is still in effect, buy and load 2007, then get 2010 from there. be careful not to buy a code number only, unless you are confident that is not a problem

Home and Student 2010 does not have Outlook.

holmedown Sep 12, 2010 4:57 pm


Originally Posted by mrx900 (Post 14616189)
just ordered 2010 via the Microsoft Home User Program.....offered at 21.95USD for the Office 2010 DVD......
Check with your HR dept if your employer participates in this ......a good deal IMO...

Yes have done that - bought 2007 last year for £8.95 using the Microsoft Home User Program (am in UK) - then free upgrade offered to 2010 couple of months ago - 2010 is MUCH better than 2007 (and yes I upgraded straight over the 2003 version which I had and loved.


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