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Microsoft Office Professional 2007 FULL VERSION

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 Location:  Home » Software » All Microsoft » Microsoft Office Professional 2007 FULL VERSIONNovember 18, 2008  
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Microsoft Office Professional 2007 FULL VERSION
Microsoft Office Professional 2007 FULL VERSION

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From: Microsoft Software
Category: Software

List Price: $499.95
Buy New: $92.00
You Save: $407.95 (82%)



New (76) Used (5) from $92.00

Avg. Customer Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars 158 reviews
Sales Rank: 19

Format: Cd-rom
Platforms: Windows Xp, Windows Vista
Media: CD-ROM
Edition: Professional
Autographed: No
Memorabilia: No
Batteries Included: No
Shipping Weight (lbs): 3
Dimensions (in): 0.1 x 0.1 x 0
nv:Software Type: Office Productivity
Legal Disclaimer: Warranty does not cover misuse of product.

MPN: 26911094
Model: 269-11094
UPC: 882224263610
EAN: 0882224263610
ASIN: B000HCVR30

Release Date: January 30, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 6-10 of 158
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1 out of 5 stars MS Office Professional 2007   October 30, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I didn't receive this item. Its been now 10 days after I should have it. I emailed you twice and didn't get a response.


3 out of 5 stars It's Not All THAT Bad   October 29, 2008
I'm not having that much trouble with Microsoft Office Professional 2007, although I will agree with a lot of long-time users out there that it has "failed-safe"d itself to point of frustration. There is dumbing down, and there is DDx2. Hey, nothing ventured nothing gained. We'll see ...

Someone out there suggested that Microsoft should allow alternatives, and that would be a cool thing.



1 out of 5 stars Invincible software 118 sucks   October 24, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I never recieved the product, tried to contact the seller but they never responded to any of my emails. I finally had to ask Amazon for a refund. Never buy from Invincible software 118!!


1 out of 5 stars Bad Product. Misrepresented.   October 22, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

The ad showed a copy of the box, claimed it would be an used but genuine Microsoft product.

It was a burned copy of Office. Obviously, I didn't want a pirated copy. That was why I was attempting to purchase a used copy. I threatened suit, arbitration, complaints, and forwarding the entire situation to Microsoft's legal department, and seller then credited my money back.

Roger Jackson
Attorney at Law



1 out of 5 stars Office 2007 - the stupidity tax rivals Government bailout   October 22, 2008
Don't be surprised if Office 2007 Excel costs companies millions if not billions of dollars in lost productivity and errors. I would DEFINITELY NOT RELY on Excel 2007 for ANY ENGINEERING calculations or projects that could result in loss of life due to known calculation bugs. Microsoft in my view has a history for screwing over power-users with releases that aren't backward-compatible and require significant re-work for macros or scripts to work right. This was the case for earlier versions of Microsoft Access. Excel 2007 takes the prize in Office 2007 Pro. It's as though Microsoft marketing (and not engineering) designed it specifically for beginners. While this might seem like a good way to capture greater market share, it appears to have been conducted at the expense of intermediate and advanced Excel and Office users.

In most companies, the top 5% of Excel power users perform the majority of data analytics and produce over 90% of the pivot tables and advanced workbooks for everything from marketing database analytics to sales compensation planning and forecasting. It is this group of users that in my view should keep Excel 2003 and avoid Excel 2007. At a minimum, former Excel 2003 users will have to re-learn a hideous new menu system just to begin with. I went so far as to purchase a third-party tool that tries to re-create the Office 2003 menu look and feel. Even the most basic Excel 2007 features seem buggy. If I try to edit a text box, the cursor moves backwards when I scroll forward! It's so bad, I find myself editing in notepad and then pasting back into the text boxes.

The most advanced Excel users rely upon pivot tables a great deal. This is one area that is infuriatingly poorly designed in Excel 2007, and there are significant compatibility issues with earlier Excel versions. There are a few benefits to Excel with regard to number of columns and record/row size, still in earlier versions you could always reference an external text source to overcome the record limitation. I'm not a big fan of litigation but I'd sign on to a class action if I receive an invitation. My advice is to hang on to Excel 2003 until Microsoft engineers can wrest back product control from the dolts in their marketing group. Also, OpenOffice.org 3.0 Calc is a nice product. It has some pivot table features (not as good as Excel 2003) but good enough for the average user. My only sense of satisfaction is that I'm sure the top 5% of Excel power users at Microsoft also despise this latest release if they are being forced to use it under CDOE policy. I would bet that they are using Excel 2003 instead of this dumbed-down monstrosity if at all possible. If you are in business and have a tough competitor with a really smart analytics or accounting team, bribe their IT Director to upgrade to Office 2007 with Excel.


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