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What of MS Office 2008 for Mac? An Update

By Robert Pritchett

Released: August 12, 2008

$400 USD

Requirements: Mac OS X 10.4.9 or later, 512MB RAM, 1.5 GB Hard drive space, DVD Drive, Microsoft Office 12.1.

MS 12.1.2 Update: http://tinyurl.com/5jcfpq

Applies to: Office 2008, Office 2008 Home and Student Edition, Office 2008 Special Media Edition, Word 2008, Excel 2008, PowerPoint 2008, Entourage 2008.

160MB Download

 

 

"This update contains several improvements to enhance stability and performance. In addition, this update includes fixes for vulnerabilities that an attacker can use to overwrite the contents of your computer's memory with malicious code. For more information about this update, please visit the Microsoft Web site."

Strengths: Works with MS Exchange Server. Uses Applescript. iPhoto integration.

Weaknesses: No VBA compatibility. Considered by many to be a Trojan application. Load up to three computers per license, but can only use one computer at a time.

Why macCompanion magazine didn't review MS Office 2008 for Mac.

 

Released back in January 2008, MS Office for Mac by MS knew our reputation for being truthful and knew we would not give them a good review. Others didn't either. Why didn't MS make a "real" version (they made 3) that was Universal Binary and worked natively in Mac OS X? It isn't like they don't have enough programmers. (Snarky Remark™)

 

Bottom line: If you have MS Office 2004, stay with it. If you bought MS Office 2008, see if you can get a refund.  See if you can get MS Office 2004 for Mac instead.

 

In all fairness, they did finally release an update to address issues in August 2008

 

Other Reviews:

http://www.anandtech.com/mac/showdoc.aspx?i=3215

http://reviews.cnet.com/office-suites/microsoft-office-for-mac/4505-3524_7-32659647.html

http://www.macintouch.com/reviews/office2008/

 

A Positive Review – (But "Dr. Mac" gets paid for support) –

http://www.macobserver.com/review/2008/04/08.2.shtml

Another positive review - http://www.mac-guild.org/reviews/review409.html

 

Scathing Amazon Feedback -

http://www.amazon.com/Microsoft-Office-2008-for-Mac/dp/B000WR2F2M

By Sean Rogers (Australia)

As most of the other reviewers have written, this product is not worth buying. I got a free copy as I went to the product launch, and was soon incensed that Microsoft could sell this with a straight face.

 

Let's look at the listed "product features" one by one:

 

1. Streamlined user interface runs natively on both Intel- and PowerPC-based Macs

- Streamlined is an interesting word to use. I never had the displeasure of using Office for Mac 2004 on my Intel Mac, but from all reports it ran terribly. I shudder to think that this edition is supposedly running better. The Office applications are without a doubt the slowest applications running on my Mac, and this includes Parallels which allows me to run Windows in a virtual machine. The idea that this is "streamlined" is laughable.

 

2. Open XML file formats, the Office Art graphics engine, and other features that result in compatibility and file fidelity - This is probably the main reason new-comers would buy Office, for compatibility with Office for Windows users. However, the compatibility is full of problems. Do not spend any time working on layout for your Word documents if you're then sending them to a Windows user; the layout will be completely ruined and you'll have to do it all again. I also have Office for Windows running through Parallels, and I usually end up using that if I hope to share my documents. Office for Mac just doesn't do it properly. Keep in mind that Apple's Pages can read docx (some say better than Word for Mac does), although it can't write back to docx.

 

3. Professional design is within your power with hundreds of new customizable templates and suite-wide themes, SmartArt graphics, and the new Publishing Layout View in Word 2008 - This is all well and good but if you wanted great templates and layout capabilities, you would buy iWork for a quarter of the price... which is certainly my recommendation. Did I mention the layout capabilities don't work reliably anyway?

 

4. My Day keeps you connected to all of the day's action. Command your calendar, tackle your tasks, and simplify your day - If you own a Mac you have iCal. Why would this be a selling point to anyone?

 

5. Includes: Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Entourage, Microsoft Server Exchange Support

- And therein lies perhaps the main reason Office for Mac will still be purchase even though it is greatly inferior to competing products: Microsoft Server Exchange Support. Apparently much of the world runs on this these days. Let's be thankful that Google and SalesForce are teaming up to take it down once and for all...

 

So in summary, the real reasons to buy this product are as follows:

 

1. You are forced to require Microsoft Server Exchange Support.

Err... I put a number 1 because I thought there would be more but there actually isn't. Compatibility with Windows users is important, but Office for Mac just doesn't deliver here. Personally I would buy iWork - did I mention it is a quarter of the price for an equivalent product? Microsoft Office for Mac is a typical half-hearted, over-priced attempt from Microsoft, but no one can deny that their propaganda will make it a best-seller.

 

By John S. Malcolmson

Such high hopes for this upgrade, but 2008 is for the most part a change of window dressing. We bought this to be compatible with the occasional client who uses office, also for the email/scheduling system.

PROS:

Syncs with ical

Love the My Day app that let's you see a snapshot of schedule and tasks and flagged emails pop into this list.

Has had an immediate productivity boost.

Improved GUI, less cheesey.

Improved junk mail filtering.

CONS:

Fonts Loading: 20-50 seconds load time for each application in the suite. Then if you're using PowerPoint or Word clicking on the font list invokes a delay of up to 3 seconds. If you have a few fonts open and you're working on a document in PowerPoint doc it's a deal-breaker -- even turning off WYSIWYG font menu bears the same results unless you're rocking a Penryn. We're using Apple's Keynote now.

Microsoft tells you, you can "install it on up to three computers". What they don't tell you is it can only be running on one -- it sniffs the network to find other computers and will make you quit. This is very annoying if you have a tower and a laptop.

PowerPoint Crashes

 

CONCLUSION

Overall I feel a bit duped by Microsoft -- new bells and whistles but feels like little effort has been put into overhauling the engine of this beast. If I were to do it again, I would buy ilife, but admit that I still use and prefer their email app. Entourage (mainly because of My Day)

 

By Photoguy

Using this program makes my iMac (core 2 duo, with default 1 gig memory) run REALLY slowly, usually making the program almost unusable. [Contrast this to iWork (a small fraction of the price, by the way) which opens much more quickly and runs super smoothly.] Office has also crashed on me a few times (I'm running Mac OS X Tiger 10.4.11. Maybe its more stable on Leopard?).

 

I also don't understand why people get this because they need Office compatibility. I opened a document from Word 2003, and in Pages it looked like the original, but in Word 2008 the margins were different and words showed up on different lines.

The program looks nice with its blue glass, but to tell you the truth, iWork looks more elegant and has its good looks without sacrificing intuitive use. I mean, in iWork you can have the text formatting toolbar always show, but in Office you always have to choose between one kind of toolbar set or another (in a side-window). For people used to using Office 2003 on Windows (like me), you'll actually feel less at home in Office 2008 than in other programs (like iWork or even the simple OpenOffice.org).

 

I have Office 2008 and iWork, and while I can highly recommend iWork, I keep the Office icons out of the Dock. I even find myself opening Word documents in Pages more often than in Word because its just more reliable and it loads the documents just fine. Save yourself the time and money, and don't get this program.

 

By  A. Anderson "Technophobe" (Danbury, CT)

If you do any programming or statistical analysis with Office, stay away from this ripoff!!! VBA and the Analysis Toolpak are gone -- and of course, you won't find this out until AFTER you've wasted your money!!!!!

 

Update: Accidentally added arrows from Word 2008 to an existing Word 2004 document; now it can't be opened on any PC, and it won't print either. Excel 2008 will not save any documents on the grounds that I don't have enough hard drive space; in fact, I have over 600 GB of space available. ABSOLUTE GARBAGE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!