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Microsoft Quietly Offering Ad-Funded Version of Works
Posted by
timothy
on Sat Apr 19, 2008 02:03 PM
from the nielsen-ratings-are-next dept.
from the nielsen-ratings-are-next dept.
mikesd81 writes "News.com reports Microsoft has finally started offering an ad-funded version of Microsoft Works in some countries. Users who run the software see a small ad as they are writing their document or editing their spreadsheet. Although the program has the ability to update its set of ads online, today it runs mostly ads for Microsoft and a few partners, all of which ship with the product itself. Microsoft remains cagey on the details of where you can find Works SE. The company has been testing Works SE in 5 countries: The United States, France, Canada, Poland and the United Kingdom. It is available only through select computer makers and Microsoft won't say which computer makers those are. However, it seems Sony is offering it in the US."
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Works? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Works? (Score:4, Funny)
The right one is "It works?"
Disclaimer: this is not a flamebait. I just spent half a day fighting to convert a document produced with this oxymoron into something that could be read.
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Re:Works? (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Works? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Of course it does (Score:2)
Though i saw the latest version the other day and it looks pretty hokey with all the wizards..
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Indeed, I can't imagine any sane manager who would listen to IT opinions from his secretary. "Either you use what I tell you to use, or you are free to go and work for someone else. It's not just the matter of me being evil, it's mostly the fact that I can't read what you write. Makes you kind of useless here, eh?
Microsoft Works (Score:2, Funny)
worst for portability (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:worst for portability (Score:5, Insightful)
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Huh? (Score:3, Interesting)
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What about already existing alternatives? (Score:5, Informative)
http://download.openoffice.org/index.html [openoffice.org]
Re:What about already existing alternatives? (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:What about already existing alternatives? (Score:5, Funny)
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In other news an entire office suite Open Office not only is without advertisements, it opens many more formats, saves in a open standard format, is multi-platform, and free. There, Fixed it.
In other news... (Score:5, Funny)
Placement??? (Score:3, Funny)
(Don't worry, it'll be mostly transparent, so you can sorta see what your typing.)
Slightly OT: Microsoft Office 2007 (Score:4, Interesting)
Anyhow, it was a traumatic experience. "Where the eff is "Save as"? And how do I insert a slide? OK, how do I center-align this text? No, I don't want to insert Wordard or multimedia clips, thank you. Just a slide. And then save the file under a new name."
For me, the value of an office program, like for example Powerpoint or Impress, is in the speed I can create the presentation (for example) and how good it will look in the end. OO.o Impress is more than adequate in that sense - Powerpoint 2007, well, it failed me. Same with OO.o Write vs Word 2007 - plus the added argument that OO.o creates standstds compliant documents which I will be able to open with a reader of my choice or own creation in 40 years from now. But yeah, the fact that I can create it quickly and without logic-killing brain-damaging consequences is the greatest value.
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However that's far from my main beef about it.
Office 2008 (not sure about 07) has a HUGE memory leak problem.
If I use it for a long time (including putting my computer to sleep, so like 24 hours), it sometimes uses 2GB of virtual memory. Yeah, that's right, 2GB for a 50kb document. Of course, under such conditions you have to expect the occasional crash.
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Anyway it's about time they did something new with Office. For the longest number of years I was hard-pressed to see an
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Since you asked... (Score:2, Interesting)
Outlook 2007 has some rather interesting features. Typing in the middle of a paragraph - when the cursor crosses the line wrap the cursor is sometimes moved to a semi-random place in the text. That took a little getting used to. The last editor I used that had that problem -- well, I wrote it myself. :-(
The "invisible text" in HTML emails bug is still present too. It's a holdover from O97. You would think they would fix that. Some people feel that having some of the text of their emails randomly delet
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Office 2007 (with the "ribbon") is the biggest thing to happen to the Office suite since Windows 95. Quit whining that they moved the buttons around just that tiny little bit - I found features and said "Oh, wow! I wish that was in other versions of Office, too!" only to realize that it was - I just couldn't find it until now.
When you start Powerpoint (or any part of Office 2007) for the first time, the little round Office logo in the top left will glow and a pop up will tell you "Here is where the Save
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Examples?
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Give it some time, however and you'll soon be won over. After a week of using it, there was no way I could go back to previous versions of office. How many times have you looked at a menu item in Office 2003/OOo and not know exactly what it's supposed to do until you click on it? Well,
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Could it be that Microsoft just fscked up? I submit to you as a possibility that Microsoft has just shuffled around the interface in order to justify the publication of a new office suite, when there was nothing to "improve on" anymore.
Hi! I'm clippy! (Score:5, Funny)
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Desperation? (Score:4, Interesting)
Anyway, it is interesting step to watch and smells like testing waters before rolling out full ad-based Microsoft Office out.
Microsoft has been trying to strangle Works (Score:3, Interesting)
Ick (Score:2)
Old news (Score:3, Informative)
And yes, it sucks far more than previous versions of Works.
Hi, there! (Score:5, Insightful)
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FTFY
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It's a $40 piece of software. I would rather them release an ad-ridden version of Microsoft Office 2003 Pro. THEN it would be worth it to some people to deal with the advertisements.
There, fixed it.
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http://openoffice.org/ [openoffice.org]
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Does it require/use an internet connection?
Not only that, but to protect your children from those horrible, horrible online office suites, we use 95% of your bandwidth at all times!
Are the ads served up in relation to a keyword search?
Yes, but don't worry, we've made deals with companies who use bogus adwords to ensure that you never see something you would care about spending money on (unless it is our product!)
Does it embed ads in output?
Of course! This is just to help you get some income from the documents you create, so you can buy the /real/ version of Works (disclaimer: there is a 100.1% tax of all income earned by you i