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Microsoft MS Office Professional Edition 2003 Complete package
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Microsoft MS Office Professional Edition 2003 Complete package
Media : CD-ROM, License Type : Complete package, License Qty : 1 user, Microsoft Windows XP or later, Microsoft Windows 2000 SP3 or later, Software Type : Office applications - office suite
 
 
Lowest Price: $237.63 at VioSoftware
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27 Ratings ,30 Reviews
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 User Reviews
Needed for school
Excellent   By Larita 2007-07-15 18:06:35    0 out of 0 found this reivew helpful
I this program is the for me, because I have been to several stores and the price for their was two times higher.
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"The best productivity suite ever yet!"
Excellent   By giuliocesare 2007-03-05 00:00:00    27 out of 31 found this reivew helpful
Microsoft Office Professional 2003 delivers on its title's promise, and is useful for everyone, not just the professional user. This version/edition of Microsoft Office includes everything (or at least, almost everything) you need to get along...  (Read full review at CNET)
Pros: Better support with HTML/XML/Web pages/sites, Publisher and Business Contact Manager for Outlook not included in XP but included in 2003
Cons: FrontPage is not included.
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A MUST FOR COLLEGE AND HOME TOO!
Excellent   from SPRINGFIELD, MO 2006-12-12 06:23:26    0 out of 0 found this reivew helpful

Pros: IT FORFILLS ANY COLLEGE OR HOME OFFICE NEED.
Cons: EASY TO UNDERSTAND, FORMAT ESPECIALLY.
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It works world wide
Excellent   from Hesperia Ca 2006-11-20 14:23:04    36 out of 36 found this reivew helpful

Pros: It's a standard in the Business world and easy to use
Cons: Cost
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MS Office - Professional
Fair   By NA 2006-11-08 00:00:00    0 out of 28 found this reivew helpful
Purchased as a "full" version. Recieved OEM version. Could have gotten that cheaper elsewhere. Installed correctly. Recieved it with the mini manual, but typically don't use them anyway.  (Read full review at Pricegrabber)
Pros: Complete Software Package
Cons: "Not for Resale" OEM version
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 Expert Reviews
-- Goodgearguide Expert, Goodgearguide  rect  0 out of 0 found this reivew helpful
The Microsoft Office package has dominated the office productivity market for so long now that when a new iteration is released it takes quite a bit of convincing before people choose to upgrade. The focus in the 2003 edition is not just on producti ... More
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-- Networkitweek Expert, Networkitweek  Very Good  0 out of 0 found this reivew helpful
Editor's Choice - Personal Computer World The undisputed market leader in office suites for over a decade, Microsoft rewards, or depending on your point of view, taxes, its faithful with regular upgrades. In the Professional version reviewed here, you'll find Word, Excel, Powerpoint, Outlook (with Business Contact Manager), Access and Publisher. There are various other editions, ranging from an OEM-only Word-Excel-Outlook trio to the top-of-the-range Enterprise, which adds Infopath to the Professional line-up. You'll find full details if you click on the URL at the end of this review. Office 2003 will only run on Windows 2000 with Service Pack 3 or Windows XP. The first thing you'll notice about Word - and the rest of the suite - is that Microsoft has abandoned its widely imitated flat-button look in favour of something more voluptuous, with curvaceous toolbars and buttons that glow orange when pressed. Under the skin, however, the arrangement and function of its default toolbars and menus has changed little over the past decade, despite a steady influx of new features. Most of what you need is stored in two toolbars, but there are others, which can either be switched on manually for tasks such as drawing shapes, or will appear automatically when, for example, you insert a picture. All this is configurable: you can alter the menus, toolbars and keystrokes to suit how you work. DTP options Word has near-DTP capabilities for page layout and design - you'll find newspaper-style columns, dropped caps, text-wrapping around graphics and a set of drawing tools and shapes that are practically an application in themselves. You can link frames of text, just as in DTP programs, so that a story can flow from one frame to a non-contiguous one. Document organisation is also well catered for, with nested numbering of headings and subheadings; footnotes and endnotes; indexes and cross-references; and tables of contents, figures and authorities. The 2003 version brings some new features to Word. First, in common with the rest of the suite, you can save and open files in XML format. As HTML tags are to formatting, XML tags are to content, and you can create custom schemas of tags that relate to a sphere of activity such as trading stocks or supplying spare parts. The other main innovation for large organisations is Information Rights Management, which lets document authors control viewing and editing rights via Windows Server 2003. Word also gets a new, eyeball-friendly reading view and the task panes of Office XP are joined by the Research Pane, which adds access to various on- and offline reference sources. There's a variety of proofing tools, such as spell check, and a customisable autocorrect feature to rectify common spelling mistakes. There's a similar feature (without autocorrect) for grammar, but this, like most of its kind, is unreliable. The thesaurus is also poor, having undergone an Orwellian purge of potentially offensive words. Word has various tools for automating tasks. As with all word processors, there's a mail-merge feature for sending out personalised circulars, and an Autotext feature for inserting chunks of frequently used text. Throughout the suite is the VBA macro language, which can be used for simple automation tasks, such as carrying out a sequence of commands, to solutions for corporate environments. Many of these features can be turned off, but other irritations prevail: the Word development team lost the plot with tiling documents in the same window two versions ago, though Excel has no such problems, and searching your folders for a document containing a word or phrase is appallingly awkward. Excel stores your data in tables called worksheets, each having a maximum size of 256 columns and 65,536 rows. Each cell in a sheet can contain text, such as column headings or item descriptions; figures such as dates or costs; or calculations based on the contents of other cells. You can use simple numeric operators or any of over 300 ready-made functions and formulae. Having entered your data, you have a huge variety of ways of visualising it, with over 70 types of chart ranging from simple bar and line graphs to high-low-close stock prices. Database wizards Access takes a lot of terror away from relational databases by the use of wizards. The basic matter of a database is a set of tables consisting of columns of fields - such as name, address, phone number - and rows of records, such as Smith, Jones and Robinson. When you create a new database, the wizard offers you a choice of over 40 typical tables for home and business use, and you can select the fields. Having done that, the wizard creates a primary key for the table - a unique identifier, like a car number plate - then creates the table. You can then add records to your table by typing them in directly or by filling in a form, which the wizard will create for you. There are also wizards to help construct queries and reports on your data, and the sample Northwinds database gives an opportunity to experiment. Powerpoint, Microsoft's presentation creator, also features a lot of wizardry. If you choose the Autocontent Wizard, you get a choice of presentation topics, such as 'Project overview' or 'Reporting bad news'. These generate a set of slides offering subtopics and suggestions, which you replace with your own text, charts, and graphics. Open the Design Task Pane, and you'll find a generous set of templates, colour schemes and animations, which you can apply piecemeal or to the whole presentation. One feature that lifts Powerpoint above its rivals is that the workspace can be split three ways, with room for the current slide, the presentation outline or slide thumbnails, and the speaker's notes. Microsoft Outlook brings together contacts, calendar, email and task lists. This version has had a major visual redesign, so everything fits neatly into place. Click on one of the buttons to the left, and the main window shows email or appointments, with other navigational aids, such as a list of email folders or a monthly calendar tucked in above the buttons. There are several different ways you can view items, and you can create your own 'Outlook today' page combining lists of mail folders, tasks and appointments. There's a lot of automation in Outlook, with messages sorting themselves into various folders according to sender, size and other criteria. Outlook has become so entrenched as the de facto standard for email and organisation that it has little competition - even Corel has ditched its rival product. However, its very success is also its vulnerability, and it's a juicy target for virus writers, spammers and hackers. Whereas nothing can prevent terminal stupidity, Outlook 2003 does have some good safety features. It will block access to potentially unsafe attachments received and, by default, it won't retrieve images stored as links in email messages that phone home to their place of origin. There's the option to encrypt outgoing messages and a configurable junk email filter. If you want to go beyond the DTP or web-page capabilities of Word, then Publisher, included in the Professional edition, offers hundreds of ready-made designs - all you need to do is to replace the sample text and graphics. Even though it's expensive, Office is still top of the pile and wins our Editor's Choice award. Contact: Microsoft 0870 601 0100 www.microsoft.com/uk/office System requirements: Windows 2000 SP3 or XP Pentium 133 128MB Ram 360MB disk space Next review Previous review Back to office suites group test Permalink Comments Forward Print digg del.icio.us reddit! Related content Latest news Back-up Storage Review: Sony AIT-5 (SDX-1100) backup drive A tiny tape drive with a big appetite 20 Dec 2006 Software Applications Hands on: Organisation in databases Organise your data by creating many-to-many relationships between multiple fields 20 Dec 2006 Network Tools Review: Peak Mpeg4 Pan/Tilt Internet Camera A low-cost way to monitor your home via the internet 20 Dec 2006 > More news Latest in depth Comment Lose track of time and yule be sorry The age-old problem of shopping in good time for Xmas has not been cracked by e-commerce 19 Dec 2006 Comment Barclays can?t bank on its intelligence BI systems can prove a liability if, like one high-street bank, you measure the wrong things 18 Dec 2006 Comment Will Palm revitalise its old platform? Reports of the demise of Palm OS were premature, but can it compete in today?s world? 18 Dec 2006 > More in depth Reader comments Advertising Marketplace Software License control, Windows Vista/XP Upgrade Manage Software Licenses, plan for XP/Vista upgrades, Security Audits. Click to try and whitepapers. Free Webcast: How to Profit with Remote Support Learn how to grow your IT services business. Discover how remote support can fuel your business in ways you've never thought of before, expand your geographic reach and see how the right technology can widen the gap between you and your competition. WAN based Vulnerability Assessment WAN based, automated, daily vulnerability assessments. Click here to try and request our whitepapers. EMC - The easier way to archive is here Minimize risk, control costs, and protect vital information with EMC's software archiving platform. Online Storage - IBackup IBackup offers secure online storage, online backup and remote access services for consumers and businesses, for Windows, Mac and Linux including handheld devices. Features include Network Drive Mapping using IDrive, Sharing and more! Have your product or service listed here > TechFinder Search for Software, Hardware & Solutions Enterprise Accounting Solutions Business Intelligence Solutions Enterprise Content Management (ECM) Supply Chain Management Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Project Management Solutions Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Security Solutions Systems Management Networking and Communications Solutions Sponsored links ... More
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-- Activehome Expert, Activehome  Good  0 out of 0 found this reivew helpful
Microsoft Office's high price tag has always made it difficult for us to recommend it, especially when for the majority of home users, a lot of the features and applications will go unused. For the latest version of the application, Office 2003, Microsoft has changed the available versions of the software to appeal to a range of different users. For home users, we have the Standard Edition (Word, Excel, Outlook and PowerPoint), which we'll concentrate on in this review. It's still fairly expensive - a boxed version costs £326, but it's also available in a Student and Teacher version, which, provided you have children in the education system or are a teacher, costs just £110. This version can also be installed on two PCs in one house, which effectively brings the price in line with products like Ability Office. Enough of the pricing structure though, and on to new features within the products. First is the research pane, which gives access to a variety of off- and online resources including a dictionary, thesaurus and Encarta online. Just type a keyword into the search box to get a list of related articles and definitions. It sounds useful but has several problems, the biggest of which is that a lot of the links to online articles, such as Encarta, end up at websites requesting payment. A few more free articles would make this a more useful tool. Word is very similar to previous versions. The main change here is the Reading View. It hides unnecessary toolbars and makes documents easier to read, especially on a notebook PC. It's a nice feature for working with large documents but not worth upgrading for. In Excel and PowerPoint, the major changes are aimed at business users, so we have to say it's not worth the upgrade if you have a previous version of these applications. Where you will really notice the difference is with Outlook, which has received a major overhaul. First, the look of the application has been completely transformed. Email folders run down the left-hand pane, a middle pane shows a folder's contents, while the right-hand pane displays emails in an easy-to-read format. You can still double-click on an email to view it but there's really little point with the new features. Dive under the new interface and the changes are more than just cosmetic. Of particular interest is the junk mail filter, which replaces the old rules system in previous versions. It 'reads' incoming email and uses new technology to work out if it's spam or not. Rules can be put on top of this to always accept or reject email from given senders. So, is Office 2003 worth buying? For most people, we would say no. It's still an expensive product and most of the changes in the applications, bar Outlook, are aimed at the business user. If you already have a version of Office there's very little incentive to stick your hand in your pocket. Contact: Microsoft 0870 601 0100 www.microsoft.com/uk Price Details: Standard Edition upgrade - £185 Student and Teacher version - £110 Full version - £326 Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below: del.icio.us Digg this reddit! Permalink for this story | View trackbacks to this story Trackback URL: http://www.activehome.co.uk/actions/trackback/2012631 ... More
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-- Itreviews Expert, Itreviews  rect  0 out of 0 found this reivew helpful
There's little realistic hope that in a review of this size we can possibly get across the intricacies and details of Microsoft's latest edition of its hugely successful Office suite. And, being perfectly truthful, there's a good chance that the improvements this time around won't mean the world to the majority of users anyway, with much more focus on background workings than drawing squiggly lines under a misspelt word. That's always been the case of course - not for nothing is it said that 80 percent of Office users utilise just 20 percent of its features - and it's also the reason why, with each consecutive update, Microsoft has a tougher job persuading us all to upgrade. After all, you can reasonably argue, since the time of Office 97 the software has been happily tackling the work most of us need it to do with minimal effort. It's that old 'if it ain't broke' approach, and also the reluctance to fork out another few hundred quid for what many perceive as a slightly better package that still delivers the same results. And yet, there's little doubt that Office 2003 (and it's the Professional Edition we've been poking our nose into) is the best Office suite Mr Gates and his chums have produced to date. As well as a slight aesthetic change, XML support has been integrated into the suite. The upshot is that the software can collect information and data from wherever you need it to, which, when putting together the likes of a spreadsheet that brings in information from various sources, is a genuine help (you can't imagine this being hugely useful in a home office or SME environment, mind you). Another helpful inclusion is that you have a tighter control than before over the sharing of information. The idea is that groups of individuals can set up a location where they can locate and share the same files and, crucially, set what specifically can be shared and what can't (to the point where you can control whether an e-mail can be forwarded on or not!). It's all very easy to use and set up. The applications themselves integrate a little more tightly, although with the exception of Outlook they've had a good polish rather than anything more substantial. The whole suite is effectively backwards compatible, something which has been less than true in the past. The new Outlook looks different to the XP edition, has quite an effective spam filter built in and allows you to manage incoming messages without having to keep switching back to the main Outlook window. This is a good thing. The whole Office cake is then iced with a selection of small but useful extra features, a handy research library, lots of templates and tools and a commitment to continual online updates. However, unless you're looking to invest in Office for a large business, the compelling reasons to upgrade simply aren't here. Sure, everything seems nicer, works well and does the job, but given the asking price, that's the least you'd expect. Note, too, that the required specs rule out Windows ME users and those who aren't running Windows 2000 or XP. And something new has happened since the last Office suite launch; OpenOffice.org, a good, solid Office suite that does the basics as well as Microsoft's version, yet is a free download (we'll be reviewing it soon). In short, there's little question that Office 2003 is an excellent piece of software. There's a bigger question over whether it's worth the money. Microsoft - Office 2003 Professional Edition features - Verdict This is a tremendous suite of applications, but one for which you pay far more than some competing products. The new features are better suited to big businesses than SME or home office users. Microsoft - Office 2003 Professional Edition price Buy Microsoft Office 2003 Professional Edition securely online at a bargain price £250 + VAT upgrade, £385 + VAT new Microsoft: 0345 00 2000 www.microsoft.com/office Read more reviews of Office Applications Read our Buyers Guide to Office Applications ... More
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-- Networkitweek Expert, Networkitweek  Very Good  0 out of 0 found this reivew helpful
It's nearly a year since we first looked at the beta version of Office 2003 and, by the time you read this, the final product will be on the shelves of your local computer store. Although we were working with unboxed CDs still warm from the press, what we saw is what you'll get. Installation As with previous versions, you can install the various components to disk, install for 'first-time use' (ie the relevant files will be copied the first time a component or feature is called upon), or not install at all. This last option is useful, for example when you never want to see the tabs and lists of the bundled templates and wizards. A further option, which rather negates the space-saving gained by the 'first-time use' option, is that you can keep the installation files on disk. These files are used for Office maintenance and updates without having to use the CD. The default options of Office Pro - Word, Excel, Powerpoint, Outlook, Publisher and Access - took up 509MB, plus an optional 227MB of installation files. This is small change by today's hard disk sizes but an order of magnitude away from around 200MB of the last Office version we reviewed. And this time around you'll need Windows 2000 SP3 or Windows XP to run Office 2003: it won't run on any earlier versions. As with Office XP you must activate the product either over the Internet or by phone. Using the former method this took just a few seconds and required no user input beyond a mouseclick. Although we elected to keep our previous version of Office XP (apart from Outlook, which must be upgraded) the installation made an excellent job of preserving the existing settings and customisation. New look Although there are no radical surprises in the menus and toolbars, the look of these is considerably changed. Instead of the flat, austere look of Office XP and 2000, the toolbars and menu sidebars are almost tactile, with voluptuous cylindrical curves. Buttons and menu items glow pale orange when the mouse is hovered over them and a deeper orange when pushed in. Apart from the fun factor this makes it a lot easier to see, for example, whether you have bold or rightaligned text selected. Leaving the cosmetic for the technical, the major selling point of Office 2003 can be summarised in three letters - XML. Like HTML this is a mark-up language consisting of tags, but whereas HTML tags are primarily concerned with appearance, such as , XML tags can address content and be defined according to a schema. So, a group of wine traders can define a tag that indicates that the tagged data contains information relating to wine from that region. Furthermore, documents and other data saved in XML format can be searched by other data-processing engines on the basis of data types rather than just plain words. The advantages are obvious - it's like finding a flight using a dedicated search engine such as Expedia compared to typing 'flight+gatwick+rome+tuesday' into Google. XML can also be used via web services to do things such as enable an existing ordering software system to talk to a stock-control program either in the same, or across different organisations. Research The next new feature is the Research task pane. This is all rather sparse until you activate Office, whereupon it becomes populated with a variety of offand online sources. The former includes the local thesaurus and dictionaries, and the latter includes Microsoft Encarta, Elibrary, Factiva, and Gale Company Profiles. When you perform a search, the Research pane gets populated with short extracts from the results found, grouped under each source with links to the main article. Although this is an impressive presentation of XML at work, there is rather less to this than meets the eye. Many of the links we tried to Encarta articles, for example, ended in a 'pay to join' screen, although searching Encarta directly from a browser produced the full article for free. Links to Elibrary and Factiva articles also ended at a pay screen, even though many Chunkier toolbars and menus make it easier to see what you're doing citations in the latter were from web pages at the BBC, Observer or Times and could be freely accessed from those sites. Although you can customise the Research services, you can't just add a site of your choice, such as Wikipedia (www.wikipedia.com) or Google (www.google.com). This is a shame, and a cynic would conclude that this feature is provided not to enrich the knowledge of the user but the coffers of Microsoft's Office marketplace partners. Although unavailable at the time of writing, a deal with Amazon has been announced and a free download will enable users to search Amazon from the Research pane. It will allow copying of book details and cover art into documents, or purchases to be made without having to leave the confines of Office. Rather better is the translation service provided byWorldlingo. We were able to translate a 3,000-word document into French in a matter of seconds - it returned in an IE window. Apart from the customary howlers of machine translation, it didn't do a bad job, although someone needs to tell it that URLs ending in .co.uk should not become .co.r-u in French. There are many more languages on offer including Greek, Russian and Chinese. Staying with the Task Pane, inWord, Excel and Powerpoint we have the Shared Workspace pane. This is designed for collaboration, and within its tabs team members can share and update documents, set tasks, schedule meetings and share links to external resources. Rights You've long been able to password-protect documents and spreadsheets, either from opened at all or being edited, but Microsoft has taken this a step further with what is grandly named Information Rights Management. This tool, which is only available in the Professional edition or standalone applications, gives the author or administrator of a document the ability to restrict access on a per-user basis, as well as set restrictions on formatting and/or editing all or parts of a document. To implement this to its full extent, your organisation needs a rights management server but, should it not have one, you can sign up for a free trial with Microsoft using a .Net passport. Word In addition to the standard Normal, Print Layout, Web and Outline views, Word has a new contender - Reading View. Primarily intended for laptop or tablet users, this isn?t quite as much of a self-parody as it sounds. It hides unnecessary toolbars; optionally displays the document map or the new page thumbnails; ignores the line-wrapping layout and shows the document on a paper-like background. You can still edit text, use the mark-up tools, and zoom to whatever level you find most comfortable - the line wrap changes to suit. As mentioned earlier, you can save documents in XML format. If you are using the Professional edition of Office (or a standalone copy of Word 2003), you can attach an XML schema to any document from the Templates and Add-ins dialogue. Unlike the Excel team, Word?s developers have never quite mastered the challenge of arranging two documents side-by-side in the same parent Window. They abandoned the quest in Office 2000, presenting every document as if it was running in a separate instance of the program and, although it?s possible in Office XP, it involves a lot of manual resizing. Word 2003 is somewhat better, with a 'Compare side-by-side' command. Our other pet peeve - the sheer awfulness of the file search interface - stays unimproved and it still takes 10 mouse clicks to drill down to a typical third-level target folder.` Excel Apart from the common ground of XML, Rights Management and Shared Workspace, Excel users have a few more treats. Smart Documents work like supercharged templates and can be used in an expenses claim, for example, to fill in form fields that it 'knows' about, such as your name and department and, when you've filled in the details, send itself to your boss. There's improved list functionality that integrates with the shared workspace; improvement to statistical functions such as CRITBINOM and HYPGEOMDIST for those who appreciate such things; and as with Word, the option to view workbooks side by side. Powerpoint Powerpoint boasts a long-awaited update to the standalone viewer, which runs on Windows 98 or later. There?s a CD packager that works in conjunction with the Windows XP burner or with third-party software on Windows 2000. A new slideshow toolbar features tools for pen annotation and highlighting, as well as navigation buttons. Finally, users have the same Information Rights Management and Shared Workspace features seen in Word and Excel. Access Access sees a number of minor improvements including the enabling of the Smart Tags seen in Word and Excel XP. You can view information on dependencies between database objects, both upwards and downwards. There's automatic error checking in forms and reports, for things such as two controls using the same keyboard shortcut. There's also automatic propagation of field properties, so when you modify the properties of an inherited field, controls bound to that field can be updated accordingly. There?s also a useful backup feature that lets you save a 'justin- case' version of a database before making major changes. Outlook Outlook is definitely the pampered child of the family in terms of care and attention. First, it has had a complete visual makeover, as our screenshot (right) shows. When reading mail, for instance, the screen is split into three columns. On the left the Navigation pane shows a list of mail folders, as well as navigation buttons to go to other parts of Outlook. The central pane shows a list of items in the current folder and on the right is a reading pane, which replaces the former preview pane. It not only shows more text but, like Word's Reading Layout view, does so with an emphasis on readability. You can still double-click an item to display it in a separate window, but you may well find you never need to. Outlook's enhancements are more than cosmetic. There's an option to block external content in messages. This will stop your PC 'phoning home' to access a graphic stored on the sender's server, for example. Although this can be enough of a nuisance in its own right, the blocking also deals with another undesirable - the web bug or beacon. These are tiny graphics which send a request to the sender's server which can be logged. They can be used to return information such as the IP address of the computer, the time and duration of the reading and other information that you may well consider is none of the sender's business. Another very welcome improvement is a junk email filter which uses technology developed by Microsoft Research to evaluate whether a message should be treated as junk spam. Such messages aren't deleted but moved to their own folder and you can add rules to consign (or rescue) messages on a per-sender basis. Other enhancements include 'Quick Flags' - if you don't have time to answer an important email right away, quick flagging it will put it in a 'For follow-up' folder. Threading is improved with an 'Arrange By Conversation' option; you can view calendars side-by-side; extract messages to 'Search Folders' on a variety of criteria, and a load more things we just don't have space to tell you about. The deals The Standard and Student/Teacher editions comprise Word, Excel, Outlook and Powerpoint. The Small Business edition adds Publisher and the Outlook Business Contacts Manager, and the Professional edition adds Access to the mix, as well as additional support for Extensible Markup Language (XML) and Information Rights Management (IRM). The Professional Enterprise edition, only available for volume licensing, also includes Infopath, which is a tool for designing and filling out forms. As with Office XP the web-design application, Office Frontpage, is a separate purchase, as is the rather fine Tablet/PDA/PC note-taking and sketching application, Onenote. Other buy-alone members of the Office System family include Visio 2003 for diagrams and Project 2003 for project management. Pricing As is customary, Microsoft was unable to confirm recommended UK prices. However, at the time of writing www.amazon.co.uk was offering the following prices. Note that all upgrades require Office 97 or later (any edition) or Works 6 or later. All prices include VAT at 17.5 per cent: Student and Teacher version £109.99 (requires proof of eligibility). Standard Edition - upgrade £184.99, full £326.49. Small Business Edition - upgrade £215.99, full £350.99. Professional Edition - upgrade £250.99, full £397.99. I f you have a copy of Office XP purchased between 14 August 2003 and 30 November 2003 then you can upgrade to the equivalent 2003 edition for just £10. In addition, for another £35 you can jump from Office XP Standard to Office 2003 Small Business edition. Should you upgrade? Microsoft derives nearly 90 per cent of its Office revenue from corporates and other large organisations. So it is not surprising that the main improvements in this version of Office - XML, Information Rights Management and Document Workspaces - are designed to be 'must haves' at this level. For the rest of us who aren't going to be rushing to define our own XML schemas or aren't too concerned with restricting the contents of our documents, then the pickings are slimmer. Outlook, however, is a notable exception - the improvements here are considerable, and should be welcomed by all end users. Unfortunately though, the other main new feature - the Research pane - is a great disappointment as it currently stands. It could be a very useful and versatile tool, but its present implementation does little more than turn Office into adware. Contact: Microsoft 0870 601 0100 www.microsoft.com/uk Systems Requirements: LI>Windows 2000 with Service Pack 3,Windows XP Intel Pentium III 233MHz 128MB of Ram 260MB of hard disk space Permalink Comments Forward Print digg del.icio.us reddit! Related content Latest news Back-up Storage Review: Sony AIT-5 (SDX-1100) backup drive A tiny tape drive with a big appetite 20 Dec 2006 Software Applications Hands on: Organisation in databases Organise your data by creating many-to-many relationships between multiple fields 20 Dec 2006 Network Tools Review: Peak Mpeg4 Pan/Tilt Internet Camera A low-cost way to monitor your home via the internet 20 Dec 2006 > More news Latest in depth Comment Lose track of time and yule be sorry The age-old problem of shopping in good time for Xmas has not been cracked by e-commerce 19 Dec 2006 Comment Barclays can?t bank on its intelligence BI systems can prove a liability if, like one high-street bank, you measure the wrong things 18 Dec 2006 Comment Will Palm revitalise its old platform? Reports of the demise of Palm OS were premature, but can it compete in today?s world? 18 Dec 2006 > More in depth Reader comments Advertising Marketplace Software License control, Windows Vista/XP Upgrade Manage Software Licenses, plan for XP/Vista upgrades, Security Audits. Click to try and whitepapers. Free Webcast: How to Profit with Remote Support Learn how to grow your IT services business. Discover how remote support can fuel your business in ways you've never thought of before, expand your geographic reach and see how the right technology can widen the gap between you and your competition. WAN based Vulnerability Assessment WAN based, automated, daily vulnerability assessments. Click here to try and request our whitepapers. EMC - The easier way to archive is here Minimize risk, control costs, and protect vital information with EMC's software archiving platform. Online Storage - IBackup IBackup offers secure online storage, online backup and remote access services for consumers and businesses, for Windows, Mac and Linux including handheld devices. Features include Network Drive Mapping using IDrive, Sharing and more! Have your product or service listed here > TechFinder Search for Software, Hardware & Solutions Enterprise Accounting Solutions Business Intelligence Solutions Enterprise Content Management (ECM) Supply Chain Management Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) Project Management Solutions Customer Relationship Management (CRM) Security Solutions Systems Management Networking and Communications Solutions Sponsored links ... More
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Microsoft MS Office Professional Edition 2003 Complete package Full Description
Microsoft MS Office Professional Edition 2003 Complete package Office Professional Edition 2003 can help you and your organization communicate information with immediacy and impact. New, yet familiar programs help you build connections between people, information, and business processes.