Windows-Help.NET Newsletter 25 Oct. 2003, Vol 6 No. 35

In this issue:

w   Microsoft Launches Office System
w   Microsoft Security Bulletin
w   Featured Software: Registry First Aid
w   Recent Support BBS Postings
w   Web Site Updates
w   Administrivia

 
Find all your free catalog needs right here
 

Microsoft Launches Office System

by Arie Slob

Hello Windows users,

Microsoft Launches Office System Microsoft Corp. today announced the general availability of the new Microsoft® Office System which includes six suites, 11 products, four servers, one service and Solution Accelerator. The Microsoft Office System consists of the 2003 versions of the core Office suites and programs; updates to other information work programs such as Visio®, FrontPage®, Publisher and Project; two completely new programs, Microsoft Office OneNote™ and Microsoft Office InfoPath™; and four servers, including the new Office Live Communications Server 2003 and Exchange Server 2003.

"The new Office System is a major leap forward for information workers," said Bill Gates, chairman and chief software architect at Microsoft. "It makes information work more productive — and more profitable — by offering innovative new ways to communicate, to find and share information, and to manage complex projects."

Six Office System bundles will be available, including a new addition for small businesses and another to be installed on new PCs. The bundles are:

  • Office 2003 Basic Edition - Only bundled with new PCs and includes Microsoft Word, Excel, and Outlook
  • Office 2003 Standard Edition - Available at retail. Includes Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook
  • Office 2003 Professional Edition - Available at retail. Includes all of the Standard Edition plus Microsoft Access, Publisher, and Business Contact Manager1 for Outlook
  • Office 2003 Professional Enterprise Edition - Only available through volume licensing (the primary way that large enterprises purchase software) and will include all the applications from the Professional Edition, plus Microsoft InfoPath2
  • Office 2003 Small Business Edition - Available at retail. Includes all of the Standard Edition plus Microsoft Publisher and Business Contact Manager1 for Outlook
  • Office 2003 Students and Teachers Edition - Available through academic volume licensing and retail. Same as Standard Edition, lower price

1 Business Contact Manager is an extension of Outlook that ads customer relationship management (CRM) information to contacts, calendars and e-mail.
2 Microsoft Office InfoPath streamlines the process of gathering information by allowing users to create and complete dynamic forms and submit them to the XML-enabled systems and business processes that need the information.

Pricing and Availability

Estimated retail pricing (ERP) for the Microsoft Office 2003 Editions is unchanged from Office XP. A sampling of the U.S. ERP for the full product packages includes Microsoft Office Student and Teacher Edition 2003, $149; Microsoft Office Standard Edition 2003, $399 (upgrade $279); Microsoft Office Professional Edition 2003, $499 (upgrade $329) and Microsoft Office Small Business Edition 2003, $449 (upgrade $279). Prices for stand-alone programs inside the suite are unchanged at $229 (upgrade $109) for Microsoft Office Word 2003, Microsoft Office Excel 2003, Microsoft Office Access 2003 and Microsoft Office PowerPoint 2003, and $109 for Microsoft Office Outlook 2003. The U.S. ERP for InfoPath 2003 is $199. OneNote 2003 has a U.S. ERP of $199, with a $100 mail-in rebate available for qualifying customers in North America.

A full price list for the products and servers in the Microsoft Office System is now available on the Microsoft Office Web site.

Evaluation Kits

Microsoft is offering Microsoft Office System Product Evaluation Kits. These trial kits are available worldwide and cost $7.95 US for the first kit and $4.95 US for each additional kit. The cost of the kits includes shipping and handling (some are available for free download).

For additional information on the Evaluation Kits, see the Microsoft Office Web site.

Microsoft Security

Microsoft Updates Patch

This week, Microsoft revised one of the patches it released in its October 2003 bulletin, the first monthly security advisory offered by the company. Affected by the revision is the MS03-045 patch, "Buffer Overrun in the ListBox and in the ComboBox Control Could Allow Code Execution". Subsequent to the release of this bulletin and the associated patches, Microsoft was alerted to a compatibility problem with some third party software with a set of language specific versions of the Windows 2000 Service Pack 4 patch. This problem is unrelated to the security vulnerability discussed in the bulletin. No further details were released on which third-party software had compatibility issues.

Microsoft has developed a fix for this issue and is re-releasing the bulletin to reflect the new updated patches. The compatibility problems only affect some language versions of the patch and only those versions of the patch are being re-released.

The language versions affected include Brazilian, Czech, Danish, Finnish, Hungarian, Italian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swedish and Turkish.

For more info, or to download the updated patch, see MS03-045.

Rose City Software

Rose City Software

Registry First Aid

"This is amazing! My computer was choking every day and locking up on me several times a day. I tried Registry First Aid and found that I have over three hundred bad links in my registry. I registered Registry First Aid and cleaned up that mess and have not had any problems since! I really need to thank you for giving my computer a new lease on life."

Download Trial [1.17 MB] - More Info

Recent Support BBS Postings

Loging on Windows XP - Windows XP
RAID suggestions? - Windows 2000/2003
Transferring Outlook Express - Internet Explorer
Sharing folders in a LAN - Networking
Security advice needed - Security/Virus/Spyware

Web Site Updates

These pages were added/updated in the past week. Information on previously updated/added pages is available on the What's New? page for 1 month.

InfiniSource.com

Added: Search Engine Toolbars
Updated: Search Engine Information Sites
Updated: E-Mail, Telephone and Zip Search
Updated: Web Meta Search Engines
Updated: Specialized Search Engines
Updated: Foreign Language Search Engines
Updated: Intelligent Agents

Windows-Help.NET

Added: Microsoft Releases MSN Messenger 6.1
Added: Microsoft Home Network Guide
Added: Microsoft Launches Office System

Windows XP

Updated: Slipstreaming Windows XP Service Pack 1a and Create Bootable CD

  Highlights

Microsoft Releases Microsoft Releases MSN Messenger 6.1

This week, Microsoft released version 6.1 of MSN Messenger. MSN Messenger is an instant messaging program that lets you send instant messages with cool emoticons, send pictures and other files to your friends, call a phone anywhere in the world from your computer, see when someone is typing a message to you, page a contact's mobile phone, and much more.

Read Full Article

Microsoft Home Network Guide

Last week, Microsoft made a new guide available for download, The Microsoft Home Network Guide. This is an interactive wizard designed to guide the home user seeking assistance in designing their home network. The user is guided through a series of questions about their particular requirements, and when finished, the guide will identify the specific components for purchase based on the user's need. The user can print out a list of recommended equipment types for use in making their purchase decisions

The guide runs on Windows 98 Second Edition, Windows ME, Windows XP. It also requires Windows .NET Framework v1.1. The guide is available from the Microsoft download [856 KB] Web site.

Basic Storage Versus Dynamic Storage in Windows XP

In Windows XP, you can choose between two types of disk storage: basic or dynamic, although dynamic disk storage is not available on Windows XP Home Edition, or on portable computers.

Read Full Article


Son of MSBlast on the way?

A program that exploits a software vulnerability Microsoft recently described could spell trouble for companies that haven't quickly patched their system, security experts said this week.

Read C|Net Article

Review: D-Link Central Home Drive

Network attached storage goes consumer, as D-Link ships a low-power, Universal Plug-and-Play hard drive that plugs into your home network.

Read ExtremeTech Article

Tell a friend about this Newsletter!

Need Help with Windows? Ask your questions here!

FREE Software!

  Our Web Sites

Windows-Help.NET
WindowsBBS.com
InfiniSource.com
Rose City Software

  Subscribe Free

IT Professionals
FREE Stuff
Surveys
Windows XP
Windows XP Software
Windows XP Security
Windows XP Networking
Windows XP Systems Management
Windows Networking
Firewalls
Microsoft MCSE
Microsoft Training &
Certification

Lots More Great Mailing Lists!

Enter E-mail address HTML E-mail?
Yes No
Zip Code:



Subscribers to these free lists will receive occasional e-mail announcements of special offers relating to each topic of interest indicated above!

Back Issues, unsubscribing etc.