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Like a happy and supportive hygeinic software user, I found this notice about updating my Mac Office Software and dutifully downloaded the update.
Microsoft Office 2004 for Mac 11.4.0 Update - The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW)
After much hard drive whirring, I was treated to this dialogue box:

When I read the “ReadMe” it said to figure out which version of the software I was running. I did that, and oh, I may not have updated the last 2-3 updates. So I went and downloaded those. Same process. Same dialogue box:

(actually it’s not really a dialogue, it’s one-way communication).
5 updaters later, there is no upgrading happening here. Can’t a combo updater be produced? I don’t understand what the purpose of creating an updater is if no one can actually use it.
At this point I only use Micrososft Office to open others’ documents. And that’s becoming rarer and rarer. Hello iWork.
All of this concern over $20? I’m waiting for an iPhone 16 GB
Tribolum.com: Apple Inc. becomes the Dark Side
Countdown to Macworld…
Okay, I have to say that I found this latest post from Mini-Microsoft amusing:
Mini-Microsoft: Microsoft’s 2008 - What’s Going Well?
On the one hand it says, “there’s less trash talk about Apple at Microsoft,” as something of a compliment to a different kind of behavior at Microsoft. Makes sense- trash talking your competition says more about you than them.
Then it cites Mac OS X Leopard as having a “blue screen of death and other failures.” Huh?
I think it might be useful to re-read what you wrote, mini. I have great respect for Microsoft and all it can do for computing. Do the same for your competition - if you compare the feelings for Leopard vs. Vista out there, there’s no comparison. Having just installed Vista myself on my MacBookPro, I have been more than amused (not really) with the overkill-UI-pop-up-for-every-action-you-want-to-perform-OS.
You’re not going to convince people about what Apple products mean to their customers. You’ve got a better chance of convincing people what Microsoft products mean to their customers because that’s where you can be an expert.. React by innovating. We’re all better off if you can empower more people to do better with technology.
Leopard is great - no doubt about it. The recent issues that have been caused by Quicktime changes (problems with Keynote playing movies, problems with Flash), illustrate the up/down side of a closed ecosystem. There have been a few of these problems lately. Luckily, the Apple support community is so rich that it’s easy to get answers quickly. Hats off to Apple, Inc. for that.
Apple - Get a Mac - Watch The TV Ads
“PR Lady” is great.

This isn’t going to be a multipage exhaustive review as will and has already popped up elsewhere. Just one person’s experience with the new Apple Computer operating system. And really without hesitation, and even with a healthy dose of skepticism, the executive summary is : incredible, a huge leap forward.
Installation: Completely trouble free. Followed all of the directions, even to go outside for a bit (went to the gym) while the system upgraded. Came back just as the OSX Universe was officially expanding and I logged in to the new system. Plugged in my external hard drive and it became the Time Machine disk.
Finder and basics: Apple took a bunch of little time sinks and got rid of them. And they work. Stacks get you quickly to what you’re looking for without a lot of churning. In the stack, you can manipulate the file, look at it, move it around. Spaces took me about 10 minutes to figure out and now I get it. This space is for Web browsing. That space is for mail and calendaring. Assigning these applications to the right space keeps the visual overhead low, just as advertised. Little things like the front most window changing appearance enough to cue you to it’s front status are great. At one point in the first time-machining, the Finder began to behave strangely so I did quit and restart it once, and all has been well since then.
Mail and iCal: Again, these two are improved to add the next level of efficiency. One thing I spent a while with was the to-do feature. There’s now a lot of integration between the two programs, but it’s not very well documented, and a little tricky. Store to-do’s on the mail server or on your mac? How does that work and what’s the real difference? Some test to-do’s I set up didn’t seem to “stick” in Mail. I’m hoping for an update at least in documentation. It looks very helpful, though. RSS reading comes to Mail as well.
Safari: I’m prepared to make this my default browser (away from Firefox). I flipped the switch on that choice. We’ll see how it goes. It’s so cool to see the machine go to a different space when a Web page is fired up.
Other goodies - Apple’s team knows about downloading files from browsers. They ALSO know about PDF-ing receipts from Web purchases (how did they know I do that? :)), and actually have a quick way to PDF a Web receipt and put it in its own folder from Safari. All of this is possible from the Mac’s reliance on PDF as the graphics engine of the system. It all comes together. The dots are connected.
In short, this is what an operating system should be - an evolutionary improvement in computing, in ways that make a difference. As usual, the computing experience that accompanies this system is not just manageable, it’s enjoyable.
I love this photo. The thing is, you don’t have to go to Missouri to take this picture, just got to any cafe and feast on the glowing Apple logos.
MacDailyNews - Lecture hall photo shows widespread Mac use
Okay, I actually like Mac Office and am looking forward to the next version, but….
Why?
And while on that same thoughtlet, Office and Art? Ummm…maybe we should stick to core competencies. Is this a cry for help?
Pages and Numbers already have the art thing down.
(Except they need to fix the thing where Pages ‘08 completely brings down your Mac, in a horrific and unfriendly way.)
I call this one Move.
Enjoy. iLove iLife.
They absolutely rock. Numbers is incredible - it actually does what a spreadsheet is supposed to do, and makes it look great at the same time. Pages doesn’t burp at all and it also has what a text search is supposed to be within a word processor (doesn’t the title of an application of “word processor” seem ancient anyway? I digress). The alpha channel selector is also really impressive - this is the holy grail of graphics. No more photoshop.
iPhoto and iMovie are also great updates. I have seen the commentary on iMovie being a “takeaway” for some things. It was good for me to notice that when I opened it up. Yes, it is a takeaway in terms of some of the timing stuff. It is way more responsive though than the last version, and it really does making movies a snap in comparison. The upload to .Mac for iPhone is brilliant. I think it was smart to leave iMovie 6 HD available as a download at the same time. That will fill a niche.
It’s so great that software upgrades can be enjoyable again. It really is fun watching Apple improve their applications in response to what their users want.
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I can already hear the pitter patter of this little 5.2 pounder around the house. Watch for the out of box experience here :).