Hello all-
This is just an FYI… One work around for this is to
download Open Office from openoffice.org…this will still open the files
created in the older formats.
Chad
It seems as though the planned obsolescence that Microsoft committed so
blatantly in Vista is now impacting Office 2003, too, with the arrival of
Service Pack 3.
If you need to access old Microsoft file formats for early versions of Word,
Excel, or Powerpoint -- but you've suddenly and dramatically found yourself
unable to do so -- there's an intentional reason from Microsoft behind that
conundrum, according to a bulletin put out by Microsoft last month.
The reason for the unexpected incompatibility is that, by
default, the SP3 update, which became available in mid-September, blocks the
file formats used by these older desktop productivity tools from Microsoft.
Moroever, the same also holds true for the file formats used in older
versions of products that just so happen to compete with some of Microsoft's
software offerings, such as the multiplatform Lotus Notes and Corel's Quattro
spreadsheet and Draw software.
The excuse given in Microsoft's online document is that the earlier file
formats from Microsoft and its rivals are "less secure" than the
formats in Office 2003 and 2007.
"They may pose a risk to you," Microsoft warns customers.
But while the security issues may well be real, the company is coming across
yet again as insensitive to many consumer and business users -- who because of
financial, convenience, or philosophical issues, don't want to be forced by
Microsoft to abruptly abandon tried-and-true technologies and transition
immediately to Microsoft's latest.
Microsoft pulled a move along the same lines in its Vista operating system
by failing to include driver support for printers and peripherals that worked
perfectly well with Windows XP.
Due to business users' unhappiness with this and other aspects of Vista,
Microsoft last fall started allowing downgrades back to XP.
Microsoft's push into planned obsolesnce around its Office software is less
obvious. But in a way, that's worse for customers, even if they do happen to
work as IS (information systems) administrators for a living, and particularly
if they don't.
Meanwhile, the workarounds offered in Microsoft's
support bulletin are clunky and even potentially dangerous, requiring users
who have downloaded the SP3 update to go into their system and update registry
keys.
Microsoft does provide a choice of two methods for accomplishing this
complex and tricky task. Under the first method, you can download and apply
Administrative Templates in the "Office 2003 Service Pack 3 Administrative
Template (ADM, OPAs, and Explain Text."
But as their name repeatedly implies, these templates are geared to systems
administrators, not to garden variety end users.
Under the second method, you need to resort to an old-fashioned command line
interface for manually setting the registry values -- a process that needs to
be done over and over again each time with minute but precise variations -- for
opening files saved in older versions of Microsoft's Word word processing
program, Excel spreadsheet, and Powerpoint presentation package, as well as in
Corel Draw.
As if that weren't bad enough, with Word for Windows and Macintosh software,
you also have to insert a different registry value for each version of the
program from Word 1.x to Word 97 or 98 -- sometimes using yet a different value
for a beta version or an Asian language edition.
And Microsoft doesn't even provide any instructions in its bulletin at all
for manually setting the registry values for the rivaling Lotus Notes or Corel
Quattro.
Actually, users -- including systems administrators -- have been complaining
about SP3-spawned software incompatibilities bitterly ever since the Office
update became available for free download on September 18.
"Excel and Word hang once you open the application and select 'look in'
-- this only started after Service Pack 3. Tried uninstalling the entire suite
and reinstalling without any service packs and then just adding service pack 2
and the issue is still there," wrote one administrator in an online forum
during early October.
Another administrator expressed strong displeasure about finding SP3 to have
no uninstall option. "Since installing SP3 (which cannot be removed), none
of my clients can open files created with apps from earlier versions of Office.
The error is, 'You are attempting to open a file that was created in an earlier
version of Microsoft Office. This file type is blocked from opening in this
version by your registry policy setting,'" he noted in late September.
Although administrators might get some relief from Microsoft's SP3 support
bulletin, it's doubtful that most non-technical consumer and business users
will feel similarly.
