On Tue, 2007-01-16 at 10:26 -0500, Chad Smith wrote:

> Of course, the lowest learning curve will be to stick with what you already
> use.  And I have a feeling that what most people are going to do.  Since a
> lot of businesses and end users still have MS Office 98/XP.

If it ain't broke don't fix it. The only compelling reason to buy a new
office suite is if it does something you need that your existing
software doesn't do.

Ok, some people will upgrade to say they have the latest and greatest
like people buy cars as status symbols but office software is only
really a status symbol to some sad geek that understands office software
versions ;-)

I really can't see the vast majority of people rushing to upgrade. Even
those that can upgrade for free because they are on a subscription have
to think about the time and effort to install etc. Same is true of Vista
except that in buying a new computer you will eventually have to have it
and then that puts pressure on other computers on the same network to
get upgraded. Its still likely to be years before a majority of
computers on the planet are running Vista. It might never achieve that
as emphasis shifts away from the desktop.

Ian
-- 
www.theINGOTS.org
www.schoolforge.org.uk
www.opendocumentfellowship.org

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