Microsoft details Office 2003 lineup
IDG News Service - When Microsoft Corp. releases its Office 2003 suite in June, several new application bundles will join the Office lineup, including a high-end Professional edition and a new Small Business edition.
Microsoft's current Office suite, Office XP, has three retail editions: Standard, Professional and Developer. Microsoft also sells a Students and Teachers version of Office XP, offering all the applications included in the Standard Edition at a lower cost.
With Office 2003, Microsoft plans to drop the Developer edition. The Office XP Developer edition included all the applications bundled with Office XP Professional, along with additional tools such as Microsoft's FrontPage Web site creation and management software, which the company will continue to sell as a stand-alone product.
Microsoft plans instead to encourage developers to use a new set of tools, tentatively named "Visual Studio Tools for Office," that will be released in conjunction with Office 2003, said Simon Marks, product manager for Microsoft Office.
Office 2003 will have three widely available retail versions: Professional, Standard and the new Small Business edition.
Microsoft already has an Office bundle branded for small business, Office XP Small Business Edition. But that package, available only from computer manufacturers as a preinstalled product, is essentially a stripped-down, low-cost edition that replaces PowerPoint with Microsoft Publisher, a desktop publishing application.
In contrast, Office 2003 Small Business Edition will be widely available through a number of channels, including retailers, and will include everything in the Standard Edition along with several additional applications.
Microsoft Office 2003 Standard Edition will include 2003 versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint and Outlook. The Small Business Edition will include all those applications plus Publisher 2003 and a new product, Business Contact Manager 2003.
Microsoft is planning two Professional versions of Office 2003. One will be widely available and include 2003 versions of Word, Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, Access, Publisher and Business Contact Manager. The other is a high-end offering, Microsoft Office 2003 Professional Enterprise Edition, available only through volume licensing.
The Professional Enterprise Edition will add Microsoft's forthcoming InfoPath 2003 software. Previously code-named XDocs, InfoPath is a collaborative information-gathering and management application.
Both Professional suites will include slightly different versions of Outlook, Word, Excel and PowerPoint than the Standard and Small Business Editions. The new, Professional versions of those applications will feature added functionality including rights-management controls and custom-definable XML schemas.
Documents that take advantage of those Professional features will be viewable using any version of Office 2003 applications, Marks said. The aim is to offer corporate users additional management options while still maintaining



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