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Office for Mac Sales
Soar May 13,
2008
Office
2008 for Mac launched at Macworld Expo 2008, and sales for the
productivity suite continue to soar, selling faster than any previous
version of Office for Mac in the past 19 years. The Microsoft's
Macintosh Business Unit (Mac BU) developed Office 2008 to help Mac users
simplify their work with a Mac-like interface, tools to easily create
professional documents, and, most notably, the most cross-platform
compatible suite on the market for the Mac. The Mac BU also released its
Service Pack 1 (SP1) that provides increased stability, security and
performance enhancements to the suite. The group also is providing a
glimpse at the road map of Office for Mac by announcing the return of
Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) in the next version.
The response has been amazing since we launched in January, the
velocity of sales for Office 2008 is nearly three times what we saw
after the launch of Office 2004, said Craig Eisler, general manager of
the Mac BU at Microsoft. As we set our course for future versions, we
are working closely with customers and will also expand our staff to
ensure that Office for Mac remains the most powerful and compatible
productivity suite for Mac customers.
The Mac BU consistently seeks and uses customer feedback to identify,
prioritize and then improve its products through beta programs in
pre-release stages. The team looks to user forums and tools such as the
Microsoft Error Reporting Protocol (MERP), which allows customers to
anonymously communicate issue reports, once a product is launched. With
the launch of SP1, the Mac BU is addressing the top issues as reported
by customers via MERP and other feedback channels. Office 2008 for Mac
SP1 features key suitewide updates for increased stability, increased
security and overall performance improvements. Users also will find
application-specific updates, including the following:
Microsoft Office Excel
Compatibility. Improved compatibility with files exchanged between
Excel 2008 for Mac and Excel 2003 and Excel 2007 for Windows
Custom Error Bars. Restored formatting option on the Error Bars panel
for data series
Printing. More reliable printing for elements on Excel 2008 workbooks
Microsoft Entourage
Calendar. Significant enhancements to improve calendar view and
all-day reminders with reoccurrence
Exchange Server support. Overall improvement to synchronization
support, including removing attachments from Exchange Server messages
and synchronizing to the server, as well as support for editing the
contents of Exchange Server messages via AppleScript and synchronizing
the changes to the server
E-mail images. Ability to send and view images in Entourage from
third-party tools
Microsoft Office Word
Printing. Improved accuracy when orienting tables with cell shading
Document map. Improved reliability and responsiveness to select items
Notebook layout. Updated formatting, recording status and a variety of
display options
Microsoft Office PowerPoint
Printing. Improvements to eliminate crashing when printing documents
to high-dpi printers and increased overall printing speed by 10 times on
some large presentations
Mobile viewing. Ability to view Mac .PPTX files on Windows Mobile
phones
AppleScript. Ability to use the PowerPoint selection object in
AppleScript to implement custom scripts that operate on the current
selection in PowerPoint
VBA Returns to Future Versions of Office for Mac
The Mac BU also announced it is bringing VBA-language support back to
the next version of Office for Mac. Sharing information with customers
as early as possible continues to be a priority for the Mac BU to allow
customers to plan for their software needs.2 Although the Mac BU
increased support in Office 2008 with alternate scripting tools such as
Automator and AppleScript and also worked with MacTech Magazine to
create a reference guide the team recognizes that VBA-language support
is important to a select group of customers who rely on sharing macros
across platforms.
http://www.mactech.com/vba-transition-guide |