Office 365 Home Premium, the 2013 Windows 8 version of Microsoft’s latest version of its Office product, amusingly remains a suite of applications that run under the Windows desktop — as in earlier, non-tiled versions of Windows. Although Office installs quick launch tiles, each core element, like Word or Excel, is an
application, not a ballyhooed app. Go figure. Major differences from earlier Office versions include heavy SkyDrive cloud integration and Skype Voice over IP telephony.
Ok.. Wait, they want me to "rent" it, at $9.99 a month? Yeah, being stuck with office, or their idiot skydrive, or even Apple's cloud (both uninstalled because a client application I use way more often than I do iTunes, or an office application, doesn't like them one bit), isn't enough incentive to install OpenOffice instead, but now they want me to pay them monthly to not use their product...
Sadly, way too many people will, like all the poor fools that think cell phone companies are not really committing highway robbery, or maybe do, but just so badly need to text photos to each other, pay anyway, for the supposed "convenience". Sigh...
How to Move Into Your New Rented Office 365
Posted by: Patrick Nelson March 7, 2013 05:00 AMOffice 365 Home Premium, the 2013 Windows 8 version of Microsoft’s latest version of its Office product, amusingly remains a suite of applications that run under the Windows desktop — as in earlier, non-tiled versions of Windows. Although Office installs quick launch tiles, each core element, like Word or Excel, is an
application, not a ballyhooed app. Go figure. Major differences from earlier Office versions include heavy SkyDrive cloud integration and Skype Voice over IP telephony.
Sadly, way too many people will, like all the poor fools that think cell phone companies are not really committing highway robbery, or maybe do, but just so badly need to text photos to each other, pay anyway, for the supposed "convenience". Sigh...