Microsoft sets Office 2003 loose
The release marked the most products launched in one day in Microsoft's history
October 21, 2003 12:00 PM ETIDG News Service -
Microsoft Corp.'s top executives gathered in New York today to formally introduce more than a dozen Office 2003 products, marking what Chairman and Chief Software Architect Bill Gates called the most products launched on a single day in Microsoft's history.
Office 2003 applications have been available for weeks through some channels, including Microsoft's subscription maintenance plan for volume buyers and its developer network service. Today's launch signals the products' availability through retail and other mass-market channels.
"This is the first major wave of products since I became chief software architect three years ago," Gates said in a keynote address. "There is now a single architectural approach."
Collaboration is the focus of Office 2003, according to Gates. New products such as the InfoPath information manager, along with deeper integration between existing Office applications and Microsoft's back-end server software, are aimed at enabling more effective and secure information sharing.
Not all of Office 2003's components will be included in the core product bundles. Some applications, such as InfoPath, will be bundled only with enterprise packages sold through Microsoft's volume licensing program. Other applications, such as Microsoft's new OneNote note-taking software, will be sold as stand-alone products. Microsoft's Web site lists its product bundles, prices and licensing options.
Gates used his speech to illustrate the collaborative advances in Office 2003, demonstrating SharePoint Portal's capabilities for linking documents from several workers and discussing the pervasive role of XML and Web services standards in enabling Office 2003's data integration.
"I think that this advance would not have been possible without the industry's commitment to XML and Web services," he said. "Virtually every large customer Microsoft has is now building at least some of their applications around Web services."
Gates also spotlighted some of the look-and-feel tweaks in Office 2003, paying particular attention to Outlook, which he called the most changed Office application. Back-end revamping on Exchange 2003 will increase efficiency and let companies reduce server and bandwidth costs, he said, while new spam filters will potentially save users hours of lost productivity each week.
A representative of Office 2003's largest corporate customer to date, Siemens AG, said the company anticipates significant savings by deploying the entire Office 2003 package to 330,000 employees worldwide.
Server consolidation will lower Siemens' Exchange operating costs. But its most dramatic corporate changes will come from deploying Microsoft's "smart documents" capabilities, said Dieter Reinersmann. Siemens has been using a separate application for corporate forms, requiring data re-entry and user training to master the application's nonintuitive interface. By using Office 2003's features
Reprinted with permission from
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.
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