Compatibility Os High Sierra With Office For Mac 2011
Said by: Even with Office 2016 I had to enter the Beta-Fast Track to enable High Sierra compatibility with Outlook. I would *not* use Office 2011 for anything at this point, 2016 is where it's at.I have had 2011 on my Macs for years. Mainly used to convert MS stuff we received and could not decipher otherwise. They get very little use these days.
Looks like High Sierra will spell the end of M$ here. The price of 2016 is outrageous (One user One Mac), and I would never touch Office 365 -- Spyware As A rental Service! TamaraB, I agree with you. Years ago I had Entourage, since Apple Mail back then was very bad. Then I migrated to Office 2011.
Oct 21, 2016 macOS Sierra - Office mac 2011 I have been advised by Apple to upgrade my 2011 MacBook Pro, running MAC OS X version 10.7.5, to macOS Sierra. If I upgrade will Office mac 2011 be compatible? Winrar for mac downloadhow to completely uninstall software on a mac.
Since it now seems that the only the 2016 version might/will be compatible with High Sierra, I am not willing to pay upfront for that ( which does not have an upgrade option ) or the required Subscription service just to use Mail, in order to get updates. That being said, I have decided to migrate back to Apple Mail. As well as use their respective Office Apps in lieu off Microsoft's Excel, Word and PowerPoint. Plus with Apple, those respective Apps are now Free. Said by: I would never touch Office 365 -- Spyware As A rental Service!This statement is completely untrue. Lots of businesses and governments run on Office365, Microsoft would be dead in the water if they were spying on people's accounts.There are people who seem to think that automated recommendations for content based on usage ('Delve') is somehow spyware. I think the term 'spyware' is overused and now encompasses anytime any machine tracks anything anyone might do, even if that functionality would be considered helpful by the vast majority of folks.
Said by: There are people who seem to think that automated recommendations for content based on usage ('Delve') is somehow spyware. I think the term 'spyware' is overused and now encompasses anytime any machine tracks anything anyone might do, even if that functionality would be considered helpful by the vast majority of folks.Maybe, but I've never gotten *any* automated recommendations from Office365 but I'm on a business plan. We are resellers for it and support 500+ seats for our clients. Nobody has ever said they were solicited for anything related to any content they have there. Maybe I'm missing something. Said by: There are people who seem to think that automated recommendations for content based on usage ('Delve') is somehow spyware. I think the term 'spyware' is overused and now encompasses anytime any machine tracks anything anyone might do, even if that functionality would be considered helpful by the vast majority of folks.Maybe, but I've never gotten *any* automated recommendations from Office365 but I'm on a business plan.
We are resellers for it and support 500+ seats for our clients. Nobody has ever said they were solicited for anything related to any content they have there. Maybe I'm missing something.That's my experience, too. Full disclosure, we're a client of rugby for our Office 365 account. Said by: There are people who seem to think that automated recommendations for content based on usage ('Delve') is somehow spyware. I think the term 'spyware' is overused and now encompasses anytime any machine tracks anything anyone might do, even if that functionality would be considered helpful by the vast majority of folks.Maybe, but I've never gotten *any* automated recommendations from Office365 but I'm on a business plan.