Tirian wrote:As someone who worked for about two years in a production/publishing position relying on the MSO suite, I can tell you that our whole staff universally hated (and still hates) MSO 2007 and we've very specifically maintained 2003 on all our hardware. For power users of MSO, the 2007 features significantly add, not reduce, time needed to do our tasks.
Now
that is interesting. It sort of leads me to believe that wouldn't be an isolated incident, either. In fact, I'd imagine a lot of places are probably going to wind up holding on to Office '03 or potentially make the transition to something that's a little easier on their users.
To be honest, making such a drastic UI paradigm change is a pretty bold and potentially stupid move. I found I was able to adapt to it, but I think that might be largely due to the fact that I think something like a developer and can figure out more or less what they meant to do. As such, learning UIs isn't terribly difficult. But, I know I'm not representative of the average user, and I have a very difficult time thinking like one! So, it's entirely possible it isn't at all straightforward.
Plus, when ever other software package in the world uses a menu-driven UI, it's a bit silly to try changing things that much. Seems to me that it's MS arrogance at its best: Make the world so dependent upon their suites that it winds up confusing the hell out of anyone who doesn't know any better. (Doubtful, but that may have been part of their incentive.)
Tirian wrote:I heard they also completely changed (i.e. screwed up) a lot of the VBA that comes with Office, but I have no personal experience of that (thankfully).
Actually, they removed VBA completely, but I believe they wound up having to re-add it because of so many legacy applications requiring it. I know that VBA works unchanged under MS Access 2007 since I had the misfortune of using that for an entire semester as our database management software. However, as I understand it, the changes they made to a .NET variant that didn't work worth beans broke a lot of things.
I could be completely wrong, of course, but that's roughly what I recall.