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Office 2011: Really? Really?

25K views 125 replies 31 participants last post by  CubaMark  
#1 ·
Okaaaayyyy..... so, due to my need to be in perfect sync with a colleague with whom I collaborate on manuscripts that need to be (as much as possible with Microsoft) identical when submitted to the publisher, I upgraded today to Office 2011.

Sigh. I thought the Mac Business Unit was the shining light at Redmond....

My gripes:

1/ Clutter. I mean, gawd! the Office 2011 folder is like a junkyard! ridiculous amounts of support files, frameworks, helper applications.... it's insane! Maybe other programs have the same amount of stuff (doubt it) but at least they hide it all in the relevant /Library/ sub-folder. Sure it's no big deal - once the application icon is on the dock, who needs to go into the folder anyway? And it's probably easier to delete the whole suite at once when I finally hit my frustration wall, right? (or does Office also pollute /Library/ just as badly as it's own folder?)

2/ Preferences. Okay - is it just me, or does the MBA have absolutely zero idea of what the previous / next buttons in this dialogue should do? It seems to me that logically, they should cycle you through the various sub-options. But no - they simply take you to forward and backward through the sub-options that you have chosen by going (repeatedly) back to the main preferences window. Homer moment. D'oh!

3/ Ribbon. I know a lot has been written on the topic, so I'll just join the crowd: what a waste of space, at least for those of us on 13" laptop screens. Fortunately, it can be turned off (miracle of miracles) and View-->Toolbars-->Formatting & Standard is still a configuration option.

That's all after the first 10 minutes of looking it over. Stay tuned for more in the future. Fortunately, this sucker will only be opened when I need to collaborate... otherwise, I'm quite happy in my Pages (though I'll be really happy when the 2011 iWork update is finally released).
 
#124 ·
Spreadsheet: use separate columns for year, month and day.

Better: use a genealogy software package.

BTW, did you know that calendars were corrected (for miscounted leap years) starting in 1582 with the adoption of the Gregorian calendar in certain countries. Adoption was slow. In the USA in 1752, Wednesday Sep. 2 was followed by Thursday September 14! So the recorded date in different countries could differ for the same day. Wanna blame Excel for that too?

Craig
 
#126 ·
My genealogy package of choice is MacFamilyTree :)

On the matter of the dates - YES! I just came across that bit of historical knowledge. Fascinating that in some places, a ship could have arrived at a port that was still running 11 days behind it's departure from the port of origin, and that some places just skipped a week or so in September. Fascinating!