The next version of Microsoft Office, now known as Office 11, will likely be called Office 2003 from the release of the second
beta version early next month, according to sources familiar with Microsoft's plans.
The naming of the productivity application suite would be in line with other Microsoft products. For example, Microsoft earlier
this year changed the Windows .Net Server product name to Windows Server 2003, with launch of the server platform scheduled
for April 24.
Microsoft released the first beta version of Office 11 in October last year. A second beta version will be made available
internally at Microsoft next week, followed by release to testers on March 6, the sources said. The final product should be
out midyear, Microsoft has said.
A Microsoft spokeswoman in the
U.K.
confirmed the second beta version is due soon, but declined to confirm the name change.
"The Microsoft beta 2 announcement for Office 11 is expected very shortly. At this time we have not made any announcements
on the naming conventions we will apply to this release of Office," the spokeswoman said.
Irwin Hunter, product manager for Office at Microsoft in the
Netherlands
, said the "Office 2003 name is on the table," but has not been finalized.
Microsoft marketing staff from around the world will meet at Microsoft's
Redmond,
Wash.
, campus for training on the new Office product next week. Although the Office 2003 name has already been spotted in early
builds of the new software, the company could still decide to change it.
Most of the applications in the new version of Office, the successor to Office XP, will look and act much as they currently
do. Under the hood, however, there are some big changes, with enhanced collaborative tools and support for XML being the most
important ones.