Can Microsoft Really Convince People To Subscribe To Software? 297
curtwoodward writes "For most consumers, monthly subscriptions are still something for magazines and cable TV. With Office 365, Microsoft is about to embark on a huge social experiment to see if they'll also pay that way for basic software. But in doing so, Microsoft has jacked up prices on its old fee structure to make subscriptions seem like a better deal. And that could really leave a bad impression with financially struggling consumers."
LibreOffice (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Why has the slashdot MS symbol changed? (Score:3, Informative)
This is the "Businesses" icon, not the Microsoft one.
Re:Hope this works. Ad supported is not what I wan (Score:5, Informative)
Indeed. We are running up against this with Excel 2003. While with the compatibility pack it can open Excel 2007 and 2010 files, the newer features do not work rendering 2003 little better than a glorified viewer for some of the spreadsheets being sent to some of our staff.
Re:Few consumers use open source. (Score:5, Informative)
On the contrary, I'd argue it's nearly impossible to use the Internet without interacting with open source software.
Re:Hope this works. Ad supported is not what I wan (Score:4, Informative)
Actually the subscription thing is primarily driven by businesses, not consumers.
You're mostly right ... so far. But if you read the current stories about Microsoft's Office 365 pitch, they are very clearly pitching consumers. There have only been two subscription plans announced for Office 2013 so far: Home & Student and Home & Business. The Business one is designed for companies with 10 employees or less. The Home & Student one includes a license to install the software on five computers, and all can be used by different people as long as they belong to the same household.
Microsoft is expected to announce enterprise subscription plans for Office 2013, but they have said nothing about it so far. It's all pretty much been home users and very small businesses.
Re:Hope this works. Ad supported is not what I wan (Score:4, Informative)
I would love nothing more, but my company is primarily a government contractor, and until the departments we deal with start using open formats, we are stuck. As it is, we are pretty much looking at buying licenses for the remaining Office 2003 installs by the end of this year. So far our Office 2007 workstations still seem capable of dealing with anything Office 2010 throws at us.
Re:Hope this works. Ad supported is not what I wan (Score:4, Informative)
It's a WORD PROCESSOR. It's something that should have been a well understood problem 20 years ago. Never mind 9.