One statistic that Microsoft officials cited on June 15, the day Office 2010 started selling through retail, appeared off to me. Based on Microsoft (determined by comScore numbers),
Windows 7 Ultimate Key, you'll find one billion copies of Workplace installed across the globe.Hmmm. Aren;t there also just more than 1 billion Windows Pc customers available? Does that imply every single Windows user also has Office on her/his machine?I asked Microsoft Company Division Senior Vice President Chris Capossela concerning the data during the Office 2010 consumer launch celebration in Ny Town final night. (To see some shots in the celebration, take a look at blogger Lengthy Zheng;s pictures with the orange-themed event.)Capossela said Microsoft and comScore aren;t claiming there are one billion Workplace consumers out there. Rather, the provider is now declaring they think there are actually about 750 million of them globally. (That;s up from the 500 million figure that Microsoft;s Office team has become touting for your previous few of decades.)ComScore is estimating the complete number of PCs on which Workplace is put in, which implies it includes PCs where Office trialware that could possibly or may perhaps not have been upgraded to a full-fledged duplicate is component of the count, he said. The 1 billion figure also consists of pirated versions of Office, in addition to scenarios where individual end users have Office operating on a lot more than one Computer.“They;re doing extrapolations,
Office 2007 Pro Plus,” Capossela mentioned. There;s no way they;ve in reality gone and counted what;s operating on 1 billion PCs, he added.The comScore Tech Metrix service, which the corporation launched in 2007, is like the other measurement services. It monitors information and facts from individuals who agree to share tracking data with comScore. The measured Tech Metrix hardware data consists of system manufacturer, processor name/type, running system, service pack,
Windows 7 License, CPU, RAM, hard drive size,
Office 2007 License, CD or DVD drive, screen resolution, video and sound cards, and additional. The software tracking includes installed programs and version quantity, interactive duration, default browser and browser settings, number and size of data files, and multimedia file types.Other new numbers shared by Microsoft this week include the Redmondians; prediction that more than 100 million customer and modest organization PCs will ship with Workplace 2010 over the next 12 months. That figure includes new PCs preloaded with Workplace Starter 2010, which is the replacement for Microsoft Works. Capossela mentioned that Works was put in on about 40 million customer and small small business PCs in a typical year.Another statistic Microsoft is touting is the speed at which Office 2010 customers will be able to install the new suite, as compared to prior versions of Workplace. Using the new “Click-to-Run” streaming technology, consumers who decide to install any of the complete SKUs will have to wait only 1 or two minutes to begin using Office 2010 (as the rest of the bits stream onto the person;s Pc behind the scenes). That;s lots quicker than the 15 minutes to hour-plus that Workplace buyers had to wait when installing previous Office releases, including Workplace 2007.1 final point worth mentioning again: Microsoft said earlier this year it was doing away with cheaper upgrade SKUs with Office 2010. I agree that it seems crazy counter-intuitive that Microsoft isn;t offering its existing Office user base any kind of real deals/incentives to stick with Workplace inside the face of additional competition from Google Docs, etc., as well as through the “the Workplace I have is good enough” syndrome. But that;s what the Softies are doing. You;ve got to hunt a bit for an Office 2010 deal, as my ZDNet colleague Ed Bott noted,
Office Professional, but you will find some out there.