PCWorld (USA)

MICROSOFT DISMISSES OFFICE 2019 as old in videos promoting OFFICE 365 SUBSCRIPTI­ONS

Of course Microsoft would rather you pay them regularly for Office, just as you would for any other household utility.

- BY MARK HACHMAN

When Microsoft announced the standalone versions of Office last year, known as Office 2019, Microsoft’s attitude seemed decidedly lukewarm ( go. pcworld.com/half). We were wrong: Now it’s downright hostile.

Microsoft released three videos ( go. pcworld.com/3vid) recently to try and demonstrat­e that the Ai-powered, alwaysupda­ted version of Office 365 trounces the standalone Office 2019 in tasks ranging from automatica­lly filling in geographic data in an Excel spreadshee­t to automatica­lly adding

relevant skills to a Word resume that can then be sent to a recruiter. In each of the “showdowns,” Office 2019 forces the user to perform the tasks manually, while Office 365 either automatica­lly performs the task or connects to the Internet to simplify it.

According to Jared Spataro, corporate vice president for Microsoft 365, Office

2019 is “frozen in time”: “They [the Office 2019 apps] don’t ever get updated with new features, and they’re not cloudconne­cted,” Spataro wrote. “Also, Office 2019 doesn’t support real-time coauthorin­g across apps, and it doesn’t have the amazing Ai-powered capabiliti­es that come with Office 365.”

Microsoft has been busy adding intelligen­ce to Office, with innovation­s like smarter search and Ideas ( go.pcworld.com/ nwsr) being added to simplify Office’s deep feature set, to video transcript­ion ( go. pcworld.com/vdtr), to the Resume Assistant feature ( go.pcworld.com/rsis) being shown off within the Word video. The message, so far, has been relatively understate­d: Office 365 enables these features, while Office 2019 does not. Now that positionin­g has become much more explicit.

Office 2019—with what Microsoft calls a “perpetual license”—is $149.99 for Office Home & Student 2019 ( go.pcworld.com/ ofpr), which includes Word, Excel, and Powerpoint for a single PC. The Office 365 equivalent—office 365 Personal ( go.pcworld. com/365p), which includes Word, Excel, Powerpoint, Outlook, Publisher, Access, plus Onedrive and Skype—costs $69.99, though you’ll have to renew every year to edit your documents and gain new features. Microsoft has historical­ly encouraged users and businesses to budget for the ongoing costs of an Office subscripti­on, just as you would for water and power utilities or property taxes.

What this means to you: For years, users questioned the value of upgrading to new versions of the standalone Office suite—a spell-checker was a spell-checker, after all. Microsoft would like you to accept that a connected Office suite provides not only up-to-the-minute access to a dynamic world of data, but also new services that you might not even imagine. What’s interestin­g is that Microsoft now rather baldly considers its past versions of Office to be the competitio­n: “Heads Up: Why Microsoft Doesn’t Want Consumers to Buy Office 2019” was the subject of a Microsoft email announcing the new strategy.

Microsoft would like you to accept that a connected Office suite provides not only up-tothe-minute access to a dynamic world of data, but also new services that you might not even imagine.

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IMAGE: MICROSOFT

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