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Microsoft: Free tool for planning Office 2007 Conversions

Slimy   on 26 February 2007 - 22:41 · 4 comments & 2148 views

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On Friday, Brian Jones, an Office program manager at Microsoft, quietly announced the release of Office Migration Planning Manager, a free tool kit designed to help corporate users convert their existing Office files to Office 2007's new Open XML file format. The new technology reports how many and what kind of Office files exist on networked PCs. To use the 2.7MB tool, users will need either Access 2007 or a free, but as-yet-unreleased runtime version of the Access software.

Microsoft previously had released its Office Compatibility Pack, which can help IT administrators update files saved in Office XP or Office 2003 formats to Open XML. The compatibility pack includes a tool called the Office File Converter, which can be used to convert large numbers of files at the same time. Earlier versions of Office all save data in binary file formats but Open XML takes individual files, some of them in conventional binary formats, and repackages them in a compressed form.

News source: ComputerWorld

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#1 redeemed on 27 Feb 2007 - 01:19
Cool. This will (probably) help a lot in migration to Office 2007, esp. for big corporations.
#2 Magallanes on 27 Feb 2007 - 17:05
Who cares?, cause office 2007 have a simplified interface good for stupid but bad for seasoned in office, also office 2007 is way bloated in comparison with the 2003.
#3 barrygonewild on 28 Feb 2007 - 00:09
i dont think ill ever upgrade to office 2007 im quite happy with 2003 and how it functions
#4 maf_74 on 28 Feb 2007 - 07:17
Even Office 97 does pretty much everything the average person will ever want to do with an Office product.

But Microsoft has to keep the dollars rolling in somehow, and a force-fed Office update is one of their ways.

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