Yes, I know of all the complaints that portmanteau products like Microsoft Office are much too big, too complex, and contain hundreds of features that most people don’t need and will never use.
Granted. But that’s the nature of the beast. Try using Google Documents and Spreadsheets for anything more than simple projects. And you need to be online to use them.
I’ve had Office 2007 for a couple of months now, and while I haven’t yet got round to trying out every program bundled in there, I have to say I’m very impressed. I came to it directly from Office 2000, so missed the intermediate experience of the 2003 version.
At first, the so-called Ribbon feature was a bit baffling, like all supposedly intuitive controls are. But once I found my way around the different groupings of features and learned what all of the icons stood for, I began to revel in its clean simplicity and ease of use — I’m usually wary of geeks being “intuitive”, because more often than not, they’re not.
However, Office 2007 is a triumph of design and utility. Nowadays, we expect software will be over-engineered, just to get ahead of the competition, but invoking dread and misery in customers, who have to surmount a huge learning curve to get it working satisfactorily in their interests.
I’m not going to go into fine detail here — that’s for another day — but I believe Word to be the best word processor around now, and Excel to be irreplaceable. No, I haven’t got Microsoft shares, and I don’t speak with forked tongue.
Smaller features too stand out. Like most folk I don’t need the massive clout of Photoshop for my image handling activities. But I do want something better than the cheaper programs out there. One surprise is the Microsoft Office Picture Handler which comes bundled in with the Office suite. It really is a doddle to use and has all the functionality I need, without the baffling overload of some other programs.
I’ll be returning to this review in more depth later, but first impressions are : well done Microsoft.
It’s not often you hear that, is it?