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office-2010-6

Microsoft recently announced changes to the licensing model for Office 2010.  The first of these is to discontinue OEM editions of Microsoft Office, and replace it with what they are calling a PKC (Product Key Card) licence.

The product key card will be available from the PC manufacturer at the time of purchase or via retail stores.  Like the current MLK versions of 2007 and unlike versions prior to 2007 it will ship with no DVD media.

The key number contained on the card will unlock Office 2010 software that has been pre-loaded onto your new PC, and enables a simpler way for you to begin using Microsoft Office.  The three versions this applies to are, Office Home & Student 2010, Office Home & Business 2010, and Office Professional 2010.

Microsoft are also introducing Microsoft Office Starter 2010. The starter edition is basically a reduced-functionality version that includes in program advertising and will be available exclusively on new PCs. The goal for Microsoft being to expose as many people to office before they get a chance to install open source alternatives such as Open Office or Lotus Symphony both of which are free.

The Starter edition includes Office Word Starter 2010 and Office Excel Starter 2010, with the basic functionality for creating, viewing and editing documents, which on the one hand is offering a replacement to Microsoft Works, and on the other hand is offering the user a consistent experience, with things such as the Ribbon toolbar and a simple path to upgrade to a fully-featured version of Office 2010 directly from within the product.

From a technical perspective this is a great because there will be only two licence models, (Volume licence and PKC)  and it’s likely that every PC from major manufacturers like HP, Dell, and Lenovo to name a few will all ship with office on every PC.

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Only a week to go now folks.  So the big question is will Windows 7 really fix your Vista woes or will you be stock piling those Windows XP licences.  Well in anticipation of this conversation with our helpdesk we thought we would take a look.

Over the next few weeks we will explore the pro’s and cons, and the features of Windows 7 to begin to build a picture that will give you the best possible overview of the latest edition to the Windows family.

So where to be begin.  Well first there is the edition you want.  Like Vista there a multitude of product versions to choose from:

 

Windows 7 Edition

Vista Equivalent

32-Bit

64-Bit

Home Basic Vista Starter Yes No
Starter Vista Home Basic Yes No
Home Premium Vista Home Premium Yes Yes
Professional Vista Business Yes Yes
Enterprise Vista Enterprise Yes Yes
Ultimate Vista Ultimate Yes Yes

 

Home Basic is not available outside of emerging markets like India so we don’t need to say any more

Starter is a low end product designed for Netbooks.  Along with only being 32-Bit Microsoft have stipulated a few requirements for the platform it’s on.  It must have an Intel Atom processor, 1Gb or less of RAM, and 256GB or less of hard disk space.

Enterprise is only available to Enterprise volume licence customers.  So if you buy your PC’s with Windows already on them (OEM) then ignore this one two

That leaves three Windows versions which is going to make this choice a lot easier.  The charts below give you an overall feature comparison and in the next entry of this series we’ll start to discuss some of these features in more depth

Hardware Support

 

Home Premium

Professional

Ultimate

64 Bit Processor Support

Yes

Yes

Yes

Number of Physical processor

2

2

2

Maximum RAM 32Bit/64 Bit

4Gb / 16Gb

4Gb / 192Gb

4Gb / 192Gb

Enterprise Features

Bit Locker

No No Yes

Offline Files

No Yes Yes

Join to a Domain

No Yes Yes

XP Mode

No Yes Yes

App Locker

No No Yes

Backup to Network

No Yes Yes

In the next edition we will be looking at migration and upgrade options

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