Industry


Ads by TechWords

See your link here


Subscribe to our e-mail newsletters
For more info on a specific newsletter, click the title. Details will be displayed in a new window.
Computerworld Daily News (First Look and Wrap-Up)
Computerworld Blogs Newsletter
The Weekly Top 10
More E-Mail Newsletters 

Is Microsoft Office in trouble?

At first, when I learned that Microsoft was not quickly supporting its own Open XML, but ODF and PDF instead, I thought it was a great joke. Microsoft went to all that trouble to make Open XML an ISO standard, but then they can't even support it themselves! Better still, Jason Matusow, Microsoft's senior director of interoperability, and Doug Mahugh, Microsoft Office's senior product manager had to fess up to its customers wanting ODF and PDF. So much for Open XML and Metro!

What ever happened to Metro, Microsoft's PDF killer anyway? Did it just die of neglect like Microsoft Bob?

Getting back to the point, I started thinking more about what Microsoft odd document format moves could really mean. Pamela Jones, editor of Groklaw, suspects that Microsoft wants to work on the ODF and PDF standards so that it can foul them up with what Matusow called "Engineering tradeoffs."

I can buy that theory. It's right out of the Microsoft playbook.

But, still why is Microsoft doing this? Why aren't they, at least, promoting their own standard?

After thinking about it, I'm beginning to wonder if Microsoft has been cooking its Office 2007 sales numbers. Microsoft has claimed from the start that Office 2007 was selling like ice-cream cones on a hot July day. I always thought that was more than a little odd.

First, Office 2007's Ribbon interface is a radical change that doesn't offer any real advantage to users. I have never known anyone who wanted to learn a new way to do the same old work. Do you?

Besides, if your users are already using Office 2003, XP, 2000, or heck I even know people who still use Office 97, what exactly are you spending your money on anyway? I, for one, really haven't seen anything all that much better than the office suites of 1997 anyway.

For years, Microsoft had the complete run of office software. WordPerfect was licking its wounds over at Corel and barely hanging on to life, and Lotus SmartSuite had died a quiet, unmourned death. All Microsoft had to do was roll out a new version of Office, and collect the revenue.

Then, along came OpenOffice. All the functionality of say Office 97, decent compatibility with Microsoft's own formats, and it was free. A few years roll by, and OpenOffice keeps getting better. A lot better as Preston Gralla recently reported in his early look at OpenOffice 3.0.

While this is happening, Google decides to see if customers were finally ready for an online office suite in 2006: Google Docs. At first, people dismissed it as a toy. No one does that now. Google Apps is used by serious businesses for serious work. You can even use its document and spreadsheet components offline now.

What two things do Google Apps and OpenOffice have in common? They're both free and both natively support PDF and ODF.

And, now Microsoft isn't hurrying to support its own format, but it is moving to support PDF and ODF... Could it be that all those copies of Office 2007 Microsoft boasts of selling are collecting dust at reseller and retailer warehouses instead of being used on office systems? Could users be sticking with their older copies of Office and when they do want to move to something newer, they're moving to OpenOffice and Google instead?

Interesting isn't it?

What People Are Saying

Microsoft Office

I have been using Vista 64 bit since it's release and at the time as I had no Microsoft Office programe that worked on Vista 64 bit I started to use Open Office! It worked perfectly; I was both suprised and delighted and have continued to use it since; because of the support for PDF I consider it superior to Office 2007 and because of that I am unlikly to revert to Microsoft Office!

Open Office

We stopped putting Office on any new computer about a year ago. Only those that require Excel got it. Almost no one even noticed. Saved us a lot of money. I use OO on my IMac and look forward to version 3 that does not need X11. Backup Admin

MS Windows & Office in Deep Trouble!!

Steven,

I recently upgraded my PC hardware again - only to discover my copy of XP Pro cannot be migrated to the new. So, I did what all old geeks do! I gave the old hardware to a friend in need, including the XP hard drive, and moved to Ububtu 8.

I could not be more contented. Hey, I am a user (sometimes Beta Tester) of MS products going back more than a decade. In addition, I was one of the original beta testers for RedHat, Lindows, and more.

My household has owned (gulp) multiple copies of MS-Dos(s), Windows 3.11WG, Win95, Win98se, Win2000, and WinXP Pro. Enough is enough.
Hasta La Vista, MS Windows.

One question: have you seen

One question: have you seen anybody else use OpenOffice? Out of the hundreds of computers across various companies, I've seen absolutely 0. Not even 1% of the market. 0%. I've seen Office 2000, 03 and 07. By the way, 95% of people who've tried the ribbon I've talked to like it, and would call it a good reason to upgrade.

And metro=XPS, it's even part of XP with IE7.

I work for a Fortune 500

I work for a Fortune 500 company (family owned, so totally anonymous here) and the entire IT department of one of their satellite plants (they don't have that many) uses OO, a significant percentage under Linux.

Not only that, but we sell obsolete PC's to employees at a bargain price, and they come loaded with freeware/open source apps, including OO.

Personally speaking, I wish it didn't depend on Java, but I'm still a faithful user in a M$ environment.

Is office in trouble or are we

I'm in two minds, after I read this article, the first thought to wash across my remembrance, was the episode of lost in space(the original series), where the robot is failing about repeating the mantra of crush, kill, destroy, to all insundry, and almost instantly, this sounded to me like a better coporate statement for the giant from Redmond.

Then I thought that seems just a bit too harsh on my part, even thought they seem to be doing everything in their power to make it a self for filling prophesy.

The second notion to battle it's way to the forefront, was that here is a company that smacks of someone who has completely lost their way, in that it seems that the left hand doesn't know what the right one is doing, weather this is intentional, there by creating no certian amount of FUD in the process, or unintentional? I'm not sure

As the romans saw it, everyone was their enemy, and the only way to eradicate your enemy is to engage them, true they built the world most powerful ancient civilization, but it was unsustainable, and eventually it crumbled under pressures from within and without.

And I wondered if that is the fate of Microsoft, in that too many eggs in one basket is bad finical advice, but what about having too many eggs in too many baskets,you end up loosing direction, focus, and run the real risk of loosing everything, just because of an almost obsessive need to be better and bigger than everyone else

The more I watch Microsoft

The more I watch Microsoft as as Bill G.has been getting ready to leave, the more I think that Ballmer can't handle the job. He's trying to juggle eggs--or avoid being hit by them anyway!--and well, Office 2007, Vista, the Yahoo mess, so far it's not been pretty.

Steven