Advertisement
Promo

Become a member of the ZDNet UK community

Office applications Toolkit

Microsoft Office 2007

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print

Microsoft Office Standard 2007 review

7.7

Editors' Rating

Very Good

Setup & interface 8.0
Service & support 7.0
Features 8.0
Microsoft Office Standard 2007

Elsa Wenzel CNET

Published: 30 Jan 2007

The ambitious, ground-up rebuild of Microsoft Office Standard 2007 presents drastically different interfaces and new file formats. The new Office looks so unlike its predecessors, it's likely to spark intense love-hate responses from users. This upgrade isn't for everyone: if you're patient, eager to try the latest tools and willing to relearn most of what you already know about Office, then you may relish the challenge of Office 2007. Word, Excel and PowerPoint 2007 can produce more polished documents and presentations, and Outlook's new scheduling abilities make it a handier communications hub. Professionals who want to impress clients and co-workers with attractive reports, charts and slide shows will find this a worthy upgrade. First-time Office users may have an easier time than veteran users getting their bearings.

However, if you only use a small fraction of what Office offers or you felt that getting the hang of Office 2003 was painful enough, then you might want to avoid Office 2007 or try it free for a couple of months first. We imagine that power users who have mastered the nooks and crannies of the older versions will curse the steep learning curve. But take heed: the new era of Office affects even those who don't upgrade, and a conversion tool is needed to let older Office versions open Office 2007's default Open XML files.

Office 2007 does offer complex features that you can't yet find elsewhere. However, it also falls short in key areas. Integration among the applications isn't as thorough as we'd hoped, and there's no one-click way to collaborate with others on an edit without buying Microsoft's Groove online collaboration tool or working within a server setting. The advent of Office 2007 comes as a growing number of competing tools are simpler, cost less (if they aren't free), and handle the same core features. Oddly, despite its bevy of Windows Live and Office Live services, Microsoft chose not to build a bridge to the Web for all Office users.

Office editions

We reviewed Microsoft Office Standard 2007, which costs a substantial $399 (£203), or $239 (£121) to upgrade. This suite includes Word, PowerPoint, Excel and Outlook in addition to Office Tools that manage language settings and pictures and include a diagnostics tool for use in the event of a crash. If you don't need desktop email, you should opt for Office Home & Student at $149 (£76; no upgrade option), a new suite roughly equivalent to Office Student and Teacher 2003 but with OneNote instead of Outlook. The Basic package, with Word, Excel and Outlook, only comes pre-installed on computers sold by manufacturers that have Microsoft software licensing agreements. At $449 (£228), or $279 (£142) to upgrade, Microsoft Office Small Business 2007 costs $50 (£26) less than the $499 (£254) Professional edition ($329/£167 to upgrade) that includes the Access database program. Only the Enterprise and the $679 (£345) Ultimate ($539/£274 to upgrade) editions include the new Groove tool. And oddly, both the Enterprise and Professional Plus editions lack the Business Contact Manager component of Outlook, which corporate users might want for their marketing efforts. For more detail on the different Office 2007 editions, see our comparison table.

Next

Previous

1 2 3 4 5


  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendlyPrint with EPSON

Rate this product

Member Opinion

4.0

Average Member Rating

Mediocre

3 Members have reviewed this product

View Opinions by: Date Posted | Rating | Most Useful

2000387318

2000387318

Expensive copy of Star Office (2004)

Read more

1.7

Abysmal


Oliver Sparrow

Oliver Sparrow

Office 2007 standard

Read more

1.3

Abysmal


170739

170739

Whats with the pricing?

Read more

9.0

Spectacular


Read all the member opinions

More in this Special Report

  • Microsoft Office Standard 2007

    Review Microsoft Office Standard 2007 is a worthy upgrade if you need to make sleeker-looking documents and presentations to share with others, and Outlook is better than ever. However, you can stick to your current software if you don't feel that it lacks anything.

  • Word 2007

    Review If you're ready to let go of old habits from previous versions of Word and want to make sleeker-looking documents, Word 2007 is worth the upgrade. However, less expensive alternatives deliver its core features without the clutter.

  • Excel 2007 RTM

    Preview Excel 2007's radical overhaul is attractive if you depend upon spreadsheets that can display data patterns visually with charts and conditional formatting. Plus, the new interface places formulas and other number-crunching tools within easy reach.

  • PowerPoint 2007

    Review Microsoft PowerPoint 2007 makes prettier presentations, so an upgrade may be in order if your work is particularly image-focused and you don't mind relearning the application. If PowerPoint 2003 serves you well, however, it offers most of the same features, albeit with flatter-looking graphics.

  • Outlook 2007

    Review If you work with Microsoft Outlook on a daily basis, this upgrade can make scheduling simpler and emailing more interesting. Still, we wish Instant Search and email rendering were better.

  • Inside Office 2007's files

    Tech Guide For the first time in a decade, Microsoft will introduce new file types for its Office software. Here's what you need to know to use the new files in older Office versions and how older Office files will work in the new Office 2007.

  • Office 2007's new file formats

    Video Microsoft is forcing a new file format upon Office users for the first time in a decade. How can you get old and new Office documents to work together?

  • Inside Word 2007 RTM

    Slide show This complex word processor offers tons of new tools as well as a new file format that might both delight and confuse those who upgrade from older versions of Word.

  • Inside Excel 2007 RTM

    Slide show A renovated interface and a new file format make Excel 2007 RTM drastically different from its predecessors.

  • Inside PowerPoint 2007 RTM

    Slide show PowerPoint 2007 puts its features to the fore while offering more graphics abilities and more accessible document security.

  • Microsoft Office: Then and Now

    Slide show  Help, where did Undo go? Here's where to find that and other must-have commands in the new Word, Excel and PowerPoint 2007.

Video icon

Video

Discussions

sgt101 sgt101

Does BT understand Twitter? Contrastin...

Saturday 5 December 2009, 10:49 AM

3 comments
CA CA

Can I have fries with that? (Consumer...

Saturday 5 December 2009, 1:55 AM

1 comment
CA CA

Does BT understand Twitter? Contrastin...

Saturday 5 December 2009, 1:43 AM

3 comments

Vista Upgrade Blog

Can I have fries with that? (Consumer...

Licence policies of Tech company's have been for a long time both complicated and 'Dick Turpin-esque', people just click 'I agree' without reading the Agreement. I do the same, but... More

1 comment

This Crap Site

How utterly stupid - I am ranked #40 in the top 100 - as a member of this site..... I mean HOW utterly stupid.... I have done sweet FA, I have only rejoined this site after a 3 or... More

2 comments

Microsoft Security Update: November Pa...

Apologies for this late update to our core Patch Tuesday update. Here is a summary of the update .... The November Patch Tuesday update from Microsoft follows the largest patch and... More

Post a comment



Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters