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Comments on: MS anti-Trojan shield fails to protect older Offices

There is another option 

Posted Wednesday 6th June 2007 17:36 GMT

Instead of buying a newer version of Microsoft's trojan factory, er, Office, convert your enterprise to an open-source product such as OpenOffice. Patches for newly-discovered vulnerabilities *always* come faster for open-source products (probably because the developers are alos the users, and therefor they have a personal stake in ensuring security).

The cost savings alone is justification; an "upgrade" version of Office 2007 Standard costs US$197.99 plus shipping from Amazon. A typical small business will therefor spend in the neighborhood of US$20,000 to move to Office 2007 (and that doesn't include the costs of retraining the staff to use the new software, which, of course, works differently to Office 97, 200, and 2003). Converting to OpenOffice costs nothing (again, ignoring retraining - but since OpenOffice is a "work-alike" for MS Office 2000, those costs will be significantly less than the move to Office 2007).

Yes, yes, we know. 

Posted Wednesday 6th June 2007 20:44 GMT

Blah blah open office blah. Please. There is a time and a place for advertisements. I use Apple's Pages, and don't have any Microsoft product on this computer that was made this millennium, and you don't see me blathering on about it.

Those that know about OpenOffice have already made their decision, and those that don't will be put off with your preaching.

P.S. http://spellbound.sourceforge.net/ will help your cause. Trust me on that.

irony... 

Posted Thursday 7th June 2007 09:16 GMT

"I use Apple's Pages, and don't have any Microsoft product on this computer that was made this millennium, and you don't see me blathering on about it."

That's not entirely true now is it...

Back-door lock-in? 

Posted Friday 8th June 2007 12:19 GMT

In light of the fact that ONLY Office 2000-and-up can officially read OOXML files at this time (and THAT requires a conversion add-on for Office 2000/XP/2003), I see this so-called "security" move as a net negative-- an attempt to lock users into MS software. Sure, there are stand-alone converters that will convert back from DOCX to DOC formats, but how many end-users will know this, or be in an environment that allows such software to be installed?

We can only HOPE that OOXML crashes-and-burns, as it deserves to. The fact that most professional journals won't accept OOXML file formats is telling.

-- Mikey