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I haven't been prompted to activate this. In 2007 you get a window asking you to activate the first time you open one of the programs. I've not seen this with 2010.

Where are you suppose to activate it if you have to that is? I don't recall having to activate the 2007 beta's.

I haven't been prompted to activate this. In 2007 you get a window asking you to activate the first time you open one of the programs. I've not seen this with 2010.

Where are you suppose to activate it if you have to that is? I don't recall having to activate the 2007 beta's.

I don't think you have to activate this :/ I don't know whether this thing will expire and, if it does, when this will happen. I was just checking to see :p

If we find a key, you click on the office button and then click the program name just above 'options', then click change product key.

For people who have Office 2010 and Windows 7 RC installed, can you please open a folder full of pictures, open the Preview pane, select a picture, and check if the picture's preview size expands to fill the width of the pane? I'm trying to figure out which application is responsible for causing this bug, and so far I'm singling out Office 2010 as this bug has been surfacing since I installed it on my desktop. Conversely my laptop with Office 2007 and Windows 7 build 7068 doesn't exhibit this behaviour.

Unfortunately, the design of Office 2010 doesn't match that of Paint and Wordpad in Windows 7. The glass isn't faded into the tabs in Paint and Wordpad. I'm hoping that will change by the RTM of Windows 7, but I doubt it.

This is a technical preview; it isn't even a beta yet. They were probably waiting till Windows 7 stabilised its interface style before implementing it in Office 2010.

This is a technical preview; it isn't even a beta yet. They were probably waiting till Windows 7 stabilised its interface style before implementing it in Office 2010.

But that wasn't what I was complaining about :) I was complaining that the interface in Office 2010 is more advanced than the interfaces in the applications which use the ribbon user interface element in Windows 7. So the opposite to how you read it.

It's unlikely they will go backwards and make the Office 2010 interface worse to try and make it looks like Paint and Wordpad's.

I want Paint and Wordpad to look like Office 2010, not the other way around.

Edited by Calum
But that wasn't what I was complaining about :) I was complaining that the interface in Office 2010 is more advanced than the interfaces in the applications which use the ribbon user interface element in Windows 7. So the opposite to how you read it.

It's unlikely they will go backwards and make the Office 2010 interface worse to try and make it looks like Paint and Wordpad's.

I want Paint and Wordpad to look like Office 2010, not the other way around.

Its more advance for a reason - because Office is hugely more complex than paint or wordpad.

I don't know why you expect them to more 'advanced interface' to something that doesn't require it - given that the overall idea of the ribbon hasn't changed, I can't work out what you're getting at.

I haven't been prompted to activate this. In 2007 you get a window asking you to activate the first time you open one of the programs. I've not seen this with 2010.

Where are you suppose to activate it if you have to that is? I don't recall having to activate the 2007 beta's.

If you install the Enterprise edition, I don't think it requires activation. Otherwise, the chances are they may have just changed the activation rules for the Beta to make it less naggy. I don't actually recall being nagged to activate the Office 2007 beta either.

Its more advance for a reason - because Office is hugely more complex than paint or wordpad.

I don't know why you expect them to more 'advanced interface' to something that doesn't require it - given that the overall idea of the ribbon hasn't changed, I can't work out what you're getting at.

When I say "advanced", I mean advanced in appearence only, not features. The glass is faded into the tab bar of the new Office, so it makes sense for the glass to be faded into the tab bar of Paint and WordPad. Also, the whole appearence seems to fit the Windows 7 style more in Office 2010, with the white-ish colour, therefore Paint and WordPad should get rid of the blue-ish colour and follow suit.

Surely no one can deny that?

  • 3 weeks later...
For people who have Office 2010 and Windows 7 RC installed, can you please open a folder full of pictures, open the Preview pane, select a picture, and check if the picture's preview size expands to fill the width of the pane? I'm trying to figure out which application is responsible for causing this bug, and so far I'm singling out Office 2010 as this bug has been surfacing since I installed it on my desktop. Conversely my laptop with Office 2007 and Windows 7 build 7068 doesn't exhibit this behaviour.

I'm running Office 2010 and Win 7RC x64, don't see this issue. Image expands in the preview plane to fill it.

Edit:

And yes, I'm now also being prompted to activate it, which fails when I try (can't contact the server)......

I am guessing no current home user would benefit from the x64 version of Office 2010 over the x86 version?

If you run 64-bit Windows, you'll benefit. And I don't care how *little* RAM your system has.

I download upwards of fifty e-mails at a time (POP3, not Exchange) and Outlook 2010 64-bit is faster than O2010 32-bit or O2K7 at downloading and sorting them (especially the sort), and I run Windows 7 RC (also 64-bit) with but a single gigabyte of system RAM (so, not exactly a powerhouse, or even a powerMOUSE).

However, you'll hate having to uninstall your 32-bit version of Office first.

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