May 30, 2003

Will Microsoft Office never let us rest?

Just as companies get accustomed to Office XP, Redmond prepares a new version

See correction below

It’s taken months to work the kinks out, but now you’ve got your users humming along on Office XP backed up by Windows 2000 Server and Active Directory. So what happens? Redmond goes and starts trumpeting the release of Office 2003. Seems as though we just get the wrinkles worked out of one version of Office, and Microsoft insists we absolutely can’t live without the next one.

Fortunately, no one has to start sweating quite yet; Microsoft has released no tangible information on Office 2003 other than new features. No pricing and only a vague “second half of 2003” ship date, which usually means more than we think it’s worth and about a minute before 2004. And in another strange move, Microsoft hasn’t really added any new software to sweeten the offer. Office 2003 will be composed of the same basic applications as its previous incarnations, namely Access 2003, Excel 2003, Outlook 2003, PowerPoint 2003, and Word 2003.

In fact, the company has actually taken away some functionality in that FrontPage 2003 will no longer be made available as part of a suite purchase but is instead relegated to standalone status only, similar to Project and Visio. Many of us were expecting OneNote 2003, a handwriting-recognition note-taker and organizer for Microsoft’s Tablet PC version of Windows XP, to be made part of Office 2003, but no-go there either.

So what do you get? Well, first a bit of a headache deciding which suite version is appropriate because there are six of them now. First there’s Office Basic Edition 2003, which will only come installed with a new PC purchase.

Then you’ve got Office Standard Edition 2003, which is what you’ll find on the shelf at CompUSA along with Office Professional Edition 2003. The difference between the two is that Professional will come with Publisher 2003, Business Contact Manager 2003, and the "professional" versions (read "more XML-capable") of Word, Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, and Access. Both these versions will not only be available retail, but through all the other channels as well. So will Office Small Business Edition 2003, which includes everything that Office Professional Edition 2003 has except the upgraded version of Word. Tossed in after all this is Office Student and Teacher Edition 2003, which includes only the Big Four applications available via retail or academic license.

Last, there’s the heavyweight of course, which is Office Professional Enterprise Edition 2003. This has all the meat found in the Professional Edition along with "professional" versions of all the core applications as well as Microsoft’s InfoPath XML-based electronic forms-creation and database client software. This one, however, will only be available via corporate or academic volume licensing. No pricing for any of these yet, but if an open license of corporate-edition Office XP costs about $65,000 for 100 users today, you can bet this will cost a good chunk more.

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