I have Office Pro 2010 and it is absolutely fine.Not since MS Office 2010 came out.
I have Office Pro 2010 and it is absolutely fine.Not since MS Office 2010 came out.
Fine for you perhaps. Very good. Amongst my friends and colleagues the news isn't QUITE so good however. sadface dot jaypeg.I have Office Pro 2010 and it is absolutely fine.
our office is currently upgrading and as usual loads of problems with compatability are emerging. If history repeats itself they will probably only just have sorted the problems by the time windows 97 comes out
You'd be best off making sure every usb device you intend on using is plugged into the computer when you install the new version of Linux. Tends to be the easiest way for things to be installed if they're supported.Well I'm typing this on my net-book running Linux Puppy from a USB stick that I downloaded the "iso" to, having found a suitable program to burn it to the USB stick!
Its "talking" to my iPhone for the wireless connection but I have so far failed to get it to connect via my USB 3g dongle.
When I get home I shall download the Linux Mint suggested above and give it all a go.
If my memory serves me correct I think that I have got this far before......time will tell if I get any further with Mint!!
I'm sure IS were diligent in their feasibility and design stage!! LOLI assume they didn't do a pilot first??
 leaving the C: drive, which originally had about 50GB in it, now about 50MB, and Windows, not surprisingly, unable to start.   I attempted to re-install Windows, which couldn't fit into C (and didn't detect any previous installation either), so the installer set up a new partition and Windows is now limping along in a new drive H, with no updates, lots of missing drivers, and unable to install up to date browsers. And no sign of the files that were originally there. Fortunately we backed up all the documents on the hard drive on an external drive, so can restore them in theory, but really need to have a properly working version of Windows and the missing space accessible to copy them into. Windows is showing about the right amount of disk space as 'empty space' alongside the partitions, but I don't know if it will be possible to restore this. I have seen references to utilities for fixing partition problems like this, but looks like it will be difficult even downloading them properly with Windows, and I'm reluctant to mess around further with partitions from Linux. I suspect the most likely outcome is that I'm going to have to do a clean re-install of Windows, re-formatting the whole hard drive, re-installing the important software and then copying back from the backup, but if anyone has any bright ideas to avoid this, I'd be very grateful! And will it still be possible to download already released XP updates once Microsoft stop supporting it, or will they take even those off their website?
 leaving the C: drive, which originally had about 50GB in it, now about 50MB, and Windows, not surprisingly, unable to start.   I attempted to re-install Windows, which couldn't fit into C (and didn't detect any previous installation either), so the installer set up a new partition and Windows is now limping along in a new drive H, with no updates, lots of missing drivers, and unable to install up to date browsers. And no sign of the files that were originally there. Fortunately we backed up all the documents on the hard drive on an external drive, so can restore them in theory, but really need to have a properly working version of Windows and the missing space accessible to copy them into. Windows is showing about the right amount of disk space as 'empty space' alongside the partitions, but I don't know if it will be possible to restore this. I have seen references to utilities for fixing partition problems like this, but looks like it will be difficult even downloading them properly with Windows, and I'm reluctant to mess around further with partitions from Linux. I suspect the most likely outcome is that I'm going to have to do a clean re-install of Windows, re-formatting the whole hard drive, re-installing the important software and then copying back from the backup, but if anyone has any bright ideas to avoid this, I'd be very grateful! And will it still be possible to download already released XP updates once Microsoft stop supporting it, or will they take even those off their website?