TidBITS#591/06-Aug-01
=====================

  Wondering if Microsoft will get behind Mac OS X? Previews of
  Microsoft Office 10 indicate that Microsoft is going all out on
  supporting Apple's new operating system. Looking inward, Adam
  passes on the tallied answers to the questions we ask of people
  subscribing to and unsubscribing from TidBITS, and in the news, we
  cover the shutdown of Metricom's wireless Ricochet network and the
  releases of Conflict Catcher 8.0.9 and Spring Cleaning 4.0.

Topics:
    MailBITS/06-Aug-01
    Navel Gazing for Fun and Profit
    Microsoft Office 10's Carrot and Stick

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-591.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/issues/2001/TidBITS#591_06-Aug-01.etx>

Copyright 2001 TidBITS Electronic Publishing. All rights reserved.
   Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
   ---------------------------------------------------------------

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MailBITS/06-Aug-01
------------------

**Metricom's Ricochet Network Goes Dark** -- Hard on the heels of
  last month's bankruptcy filing, long-range wireless networking
  company Metricom announced last week that it would be shutting
  down its 15-city wireless network on 08-Aug-01 and laying off 282
  employees. The service, which required a special modem (initially
  an external box, most recently a PC Card) to communicate with
  numerous low-power poletop radios, operated at 128 Kbps in all its
  markets except Seattle and Washington, which were never upgraded
  past the original 28.8 Kbps. The service was well-liked by its
  50,000 users, though the price was high at $75 per month and the
  company did a lousy job of promoting its technology.
  Interestingly, the network is up for auction on 16-Aug-01; it's
  conceivable that another company might snap it up. Metricom's Form
  8-K offers an illuminating look at just how much these services
  cost to implement. Going against any comeback of the Ricochet
  network are the increasingly common public 802.11 wireless
  Ethernet networks, which offer potentially much higher throughputs
  and lower equipment costs. [ACE]

<http://www.metricom.com/>
<http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/010802/0333.html>
<http://biz.yahoo.com/e/010720/mcomq.html>
<http://www.seattlewireless.net/index.cgi/SimilarProjectLinks>


**Conflict Catcher 8.0.9 Supports Mac OS 9.2 and Mac OS X** --
  Casady & Greene has released Conflict Catcher 8.0.9, a minor
  release of their venerable extension manager. (See "Nice Catch,
  Conflict Catcher" in TidBITS-446_ for a review of Conflict Catcher
  8.) Like so many of the previous releases of Conflict Catcher,
  this one doesn't add any major features but updates the program's
  internal data to support Mac OS 9.2. However, it's an important
  update for Mac OS X users because it fixes a problem with
  requesting a serial number when booting into Mac OS X's Classic
  mode. Another fix addresses a problem in the sets activated by the
  Mac OS X startup set feature. Conflict Catcher 8.0.9 is a free
  update for registered users of Conflict Catcher 8; it's a 2.1 MB
  download. [ACE]

<http://www.casadyg.com/products/conflictcatcher/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05086>


**Spring Cleaning Sweeps Out Mac OS X** -- Aladdin Systems
  recently released Spring Cleaning 4.0, which helps you throw out
  all that digital crud that accumulates on our hard disk: things
  like duplicate files, orphaned aliases, empty folders, orphaned
  preferences files, and so on. New features in Spring Cleaning 4.0
  are MailCleaner for locating and removing unwanted email
  attachments, CookieEditor for deleting selected cookies, and two
  user modes for easier use. Plus, in Mac OS X, Spring Cleaning now
  provides QuickCompare for finding differences between duplicate
  files, and AccessMonitor for tracking accesses on files so you can
  later tell if they're important to keep. But what makes Spring
  Cleaning 4.0 interesting on Mac OS X is the simple fact that many
  people aren't yet comfortable navigating around the guts of the
  operating system, knowing where things go, and understanding what
  is and is not important. That working knowledge may come
  eventually, but for now, Spring Cleaning will be an easy way to
  clean up Mac OS X hard disks. System requirements are a PowerPC-
  based Macintosh running Mac OS 8.1 or later. Spring Cleaning 4.0
  normally costs $50, with upgrades from previous versions at $20,
  but TidBITS readers can get it (and have Aladdin's Flashback
  revision control utility thrown in) for $30 by using the Digital
  River URL below. [ACE]

<http://www.aladdinsys.com/springcleaning/>
<http://www.digitalriver.com/aladdin/41330/>


Navel Gazing for Fun and Profit
-------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  Ten years ago on our first anniversary, I related the results of
  an email and postal mail survey in a special issue. (That's right,
  postal mail: the Web wouldn't arrive for several years yet.) A
  recent trip back to that issue proved fascinating, and not just
  for the raw numbers (which revealed that we had a readership of
  between 5,000 and 20,000 people from 18 countries, as compared to
  today's numbers of about 60,000 readers hailing from more than 120
  top-level domains that correspond roughly to countries). I was
  most intrigued to see how the comments on what people liked the
  most about TidBITS have changed little over the years. I suppose
  that's a testament to how consistent we've remained.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbiss=54>


**Why Do People Leave TidBITS?** Nonetheless, things do change,
  and despite increases in Web traffic, we haven't seen mailing list
  subscription increases for some time now. The main reason is
  simple, but truly annoying - bounces. We run an extremely clean
  list, and after a certain number of bounces, we remove non-
  deliverable addresses to avoid wasting bandwidth. Bounces hit us
  harder than most lists, I suspect, because TidBITS has been around
  so long. People may have subscribed from one address years ago,
  set up forwarding when they moved to a different address. Years
  later, the first address may go defunct, or the user may move
  again, forgetting about the original forward. (Unfortunately, we
  have to spend a fair bit of time figuring out how some bounces
  correspond to subscriptions in our database - and there are a tiny
  handful we've _never_ puzzled through.)

  So, over the last 15 months, we've been asking people why they
  unsubscribe from TidBITS in order to learn if there are changes we
  could make that would prevent other people from unsubscribing.
  We've heard back from roughly 1,800 people; of those, nearly 1,100
  don't really count, since they were just changing their addresses
  on our list or unsubscribing temporarily during a vacation. The
  people who truly stopped reading TidBITS did so for reasons mostly
  related to content and presentation.

  As far as our content goes, I think we're on safe ground. About 23
  percent of the people who unsubscribed did so because they don't
  use Macs any more, which makes our content less relevant. That's
  depressing, but not something over which we have much control (and
  for those switching to Windows, I'd recommend newsletters from
  Lockergnome, Woody's Watch, and The Naked PC). However, the other
  numbers tell me our content remains on the right track. Only 0.9
  percent feel we need more breadth, 0.7 percent don't find TidBITS
  sufficiently technical, 2.3 percent find our articles too
  technical, 3 percent just aren't interested in our articles, and
  0.6 percent think we're covering the wrong topics. Combined, about
  a third of the people who unsubscribe do so because of our
  content, and the lion's share of those people did so because of a
  platform change. I can live with that.

<http://www.lockergnome.com/>
<http://www.woodyswatch.com/>
<http://www.thenakedpc.com/>

  On the presentation side, the variables we control are fine. Only
  1.4 percent of people said they unsubscribed because TidBITS was
  too long, and 0.6 percent unsubscribed because TidBITS wasn't
  timely. For some, email has ceased to be the medium of choice -
  13.5 percent of those unsubscribing from our mailing list say they
  now read TidBITS on our Web site. Although we didn't break out the
  numbers, our handheld edition has also seduced a few subscribers
  away from the mailing list.

<http://www.tidbits.com/about/handheld-edition.html>

  Here's the killer, though: 43 percent of the people who
  unsubscribed did so because they were receiving too much email.
  Ouch. I've certainly signed off mailing lists when the volume of
  messages became too high, so I can't argue, but TidBITS is only
  one message per week. Arguably, unsubscribing from TidBITS because
  of receiving too much email is a content issue, since if these
  people found TidBITS sufficiently interesting, they wouldn't stop
  reading.

  A total of 11.2 percent of people leave either gave no feedback
  information or gave some other reason for unsubscribing. When
  these folks took the time to explain those other reasons, they
  were generally a combination of the issues above (and receiving
  too much email was almost always involved).


**Addressing Signoffs** -- Looking at these numbers, it's hard to
  see what content changes we could make that would prevent people
  from leaving. Obviously, if we were less Macintosh-specific, those
  people who were switching away from the Macintosh platform might
  stay, but many others might leave (and that's before considering
  the fact that Windows doesn't interest us particularly).
  Similarly, a few people complained that our content was less
  relevant to them because they were still using Macs from many
  years ago. But as much as we're strong proponents of using old
  Macs in appropriate ways as long as possible, too much historical
  content would simply turn off readers who have come to the
  Macintosh more recently.

  On the presentation side, we can't reduce the frequency of
  TidBITS, but we can shrink the amount of time receiving an issue
  takes, which may keep people from considering us part of their
  email overload problem. Our approach here will likely be to create
  an announcement edition with URLs that point to articles on the
  Web. That would let people pick and choose what they wanted to
  read more easily - stay tuned for details.

  Of course, the real question is if there's any way we could
  proactively reduce the number of bounces we get each week. We're
  noodling over some ideas that, if successful, may help our mailing
  list subscription numbers.


**How Do People Find TidBITS?** Shortly after setting up the
  auto-reply to ask people why they decided to unsubscribe, we did
  roughly the reverse, and created an auto-reply asking new
  subscribers how they found out about TidBITS. Here our goal was to
  try to see if there was something we could do to attract more new
  subscribers. After eliminating the people who were just changing
  their address (and five people who somehow had us confused with a
  non-technical paper publication called "Tidbits"), the results
  broke down as follows.

  Of almost 1,000 legitimate responses, 29 percent heard of TidBITS
  by word of mouth, 20.9 percent followed a link to our Web site,
  20.1 percent subscribed after seeing a mention of TidBITS in
  another publication, and 11.1 percent either gave no information
  or fit into some other category (the best was someone who
  subscribed after finding our Web site because his company makes
  "Tidbit Caramels"). Another 3.7 percent came to TidBITS after
  reading one of our articles reprinted in another publication and
  2.9 percent found us after reading a book or article one of our
  editors wrote for another publisher.

<http://www.charlottesconfections.com/tdbt.html>

  Finally, 12.5 percent of subscription responses came from people
  who said they already read TidBITS on the Web site and wanted to
  receive it in email. That's mostly interesting because the raw
  numbers have more people moving from the Web to email (122) than
  vice versa (95).


**Addressing Subscriptions** -- The three main ways that people
  find TidBITS are word of mouth, following links to our Web site,
  and subscribing after seeing a mention of TidBITS in another
  publication. Unfortunately, there's no way for us to make any one
  of these happen short of asking you, our loyal readers, to help
  out with the first two.

  If you know someone you think would find TidBITS useful, please
  let them know about us. You can either send them to our Web site
  or just give them the subscription address of <tidbits-
  on@tidbits.com>. Similarly, if you regularly forward our articles
  to someone, please encourage them to subscribe on their own. If
  you maintain Web pages relevant to the kinds of things we cover in
  TidBITS, we'd encourage you to link back to articles in our
  database using the permanent URLs at the bottom of each article.
  We also have a bunch of reader-specific badges, should you wish to
  add one to your Web pages. Although this might not seem all that
  important if your pages don't get much traffic, the more links to
  our site, the higher TidBITS will rank in some search engine
  results, including those of Google, our current favorite and
  primary referrer.

<http://www.tidbits.com/>
<http://www.tidbits.com/about/badges.html>
<http://www.google.com/>

  Being mentioned in other Internet publications is also clearly
  useful. The Kibbles & Bytes newsletter from TidBITS sponsor Small
  Dog Electronics and the Internet Tourbus newsletter from Bob
  Rankin and Patrick Crispen were by far the most commonly
  referenced in feedback messages. Given that their readers
  apparently like TidBITS, I'd encourage you to check them out as
  well for Macintosh industry commentary and hardware deals (Kibbles
  & Bytes) and general Internet explanations and site
  recommendations (Tourbus).

<http://www.smalldog.com/>
<http://www.tourbus.com/>

  In the end, we publish TidBITS mostly because we want to provide
  useful information and analysis to as many people as we can.
  Anything you can do to encourage others to subscribe to our
  mailing list, read articles on the Web, or read our handheld
  edition is greatly appreciated!


Microsoft Office 10's Carrot and Stick
--------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  With Mac OS X 10.1 - as demoed at this year's Macworld Expo in New
  York - Apple looks to be making necessary changes that will bring
  its next generation operating system to a point where it will
  appeal to an audience beyond bleeding edge early adopters and
  Macintosh/Unix geeks. For mainstream adoption, Apple must overcome
  deeply held opinions strengthened by years of inertia. Some of
  those opinions may be valid, others may be pure pigheadedness on
  the part of users tired of learning new interfaces. Either way,
  the Mac OS X effort will succeed only if it receives carrot-and-
  stick attention both from Apple and Macintosh developers.

  Apple's carrot is Mac OS X's powerful Unix core and "lickable"
  Aqua interface, but Mac OS X simply isn't ready for Apple to start
  brandishing the stick of restricting new hardware to Mac OS X, as
  the company has gradually done with older Macs all along. But it's
  a different situation for Macintosh developers, who have been
  caught in the headlights of the oncoming Mac OS X train that Steve
  Jobs said was leaving the station as far back as May of 2000.
  They've been scrambling just to carbonize existing applications to
  take advantage of Mac OS X's major features like protected memory
  and preemptive multitasking. Despite Apple's claims of how easy it
  was to carbonize a relatively recent application, many developers
  have found it a time-intensive task, particularly if they want to
  do it right, and even more so if the technologies they need aren't
  fully functional in Mac OS X. A number of the programmers I spoke
  with at Macworld said their Mac OS X versions were in progress,
  but almost all muttered about they were having trouble getting the
  necessary information or help from Apple.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05950>

  As you've no doubt noticed, many of the Mac OS X versions of
  existing applications we've seen so far have notable restrictions
  as the developers struggle to work with limited information from
  Apple to match the feature set they delivered under Mac OS 9.
  That's a lousy carrot: "Here's our great new Mac OS X version,
  which can do a lot of what the Mac OS 9 version does, and runs
  under Mac OS X too!" And for the most part, I haven't seen much
  stick waving going on, much as that will be necessary for Mac OS
  X's eventual success.


**Microsoft Steps Forward** -- The essential Macintosh developer
  in this situation is Microsoft. Adobe, Macromedia, Symantec,
  Intuit, and others are also important, but the must-have software
  that can make or break Mac OS X is Microsoft Office. Without
  Microsoft Office, Mac OS X would face such an uphill battle for
  acceptance in the business world that it might as well take its
  Mach microkernel and go back to Carnegie Mellon University. Or, if
  we still had the Microsoft attitudes that were responsible for the
  Word 6 debacle, we'd end up with a lame, half-hearted
  carbonization that would serve merely to give Windows users
  another reason denigrate the Mac. But the Macintosh Business Unit
  (MacBU in Microsoft lingo) that's currently in place at Microsoft
  gets it, and although they must deal with kind of political
  battles from the Windows side of the company that crop up only in
  the nightmares of other companies, they're doing the right thing
  as much as is possible.

  One great example of the difference between the MacBU and other
  groups is the just-released Microsoft Outlook for the Mac, which
  was written by the Windows Outlook team (and is not to be confused
  with Outlook Express). It looks like a Mac application, and it has
  some "Mac-first" features like drag install and being able to
  change the color of the interface, but it's clearly a Windows
  port, so much so that to get details on a message or folder, you
  choose the "Properties" menu item. Worse, it converts HTML
  messages to RTF (losing links in the process), has no Palm device
  support, lacks a Redirect command, can't connect to POP/IMAP
  servers, can't do Internet-style quoting like Entourage and
  Outlook Express, and lacks an inline spelling checker like the
  other Office applications. It's good to see a version of Outlook
  for the Mac, since it's often a requirement for Macs to survive
  in a Windows-based company, but couldn't the MacBU have done
  the work?

<http://www.microsoft.com/mac/products/outlook/outlook_prod.asp>


**Office 10 on Mac OS X** -- Before Macworld Expo, Kevin Browne of
  Microsoft showed me Microsoft Office 10, and by the end of the
  discussion, it was clear that Microsoft is completely backing Mac
  OS X. The most important decision Microsoft made with Office 10 is
  that it will work only on Mac OS X, and all future feature work
  will be done on Office 10. There's the promised stick - if you
  want to continue to move forward and stay compatible with the
  Windows side of things, Office 10 and its successors are your only
  chance. But at the same time, those who don't wish to or can't
  upgrade to Mac OS X can continue to use Office 2001, and Kevin
  said Microsoft would release maintenance updates as necessary to
  make sure the software remained functional on future versions of
  Mac OS 9.

<http://www.microsoft.com/mac/>

  In making this decision, Microsoft is betting on Mac OS X, and
  they've put their money where their mouth is by doing a ton of
  low-level architectural work on Office (to the tune of 25 million
  lines of code). Some of the code in Office is more than ten years
  old, so a simple carbonization wasn't going to work. While they
  were re-architecting portions of the low-level code, Microsoft
  decided to rely on Carbon Events, a Mac OS X technology that
  changes the way applications interact with the operating system.
  In the current Mac OS, applications spend a lot of time asking the
  operating system for the next event that might concern them - a
  mouse click, keystroke, a window action, or so on - and then
  reacting appropriately. That still works in Mac OS X, but it's
  inefficient, and contributes in part to Mac OS X's performance
  problems. With Carbon Events, applications register the events
  they're interested in with the operating system, and then they sit
  quietly and wait until the operating system sees those events and
  sends them along to be acted on. When a Carbon Event-supporting
  application is in the background, it can be totally quiet, and not
  take up any CPU time at all. Obviously, it's difficult to show how
  much supporting Carbon Events can speed up an application, but the
  performance of Office 10 on a PowerBook G4 Titanium was pretty
  good, especially considering that it's still pre-release code.


**New Office Features** -- Decent performance isn't a carrot
  though, it should be a given. On the carrot side of things,
  Microsoft added a few features - nothing truly earth-shattering,
  but distinct niceties that many users will notice and which
  address shortcomings Contributing Editor Matt Neuburg has
  described in his extensive TidBITS reviews of the Office 98 and
  Office 2001 applications. They include:

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbser=1139>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbser=1183>

* Multiple discontiguous selection in Word. Finally you can select
  words or phrases that aren't next to each other, just like in
  Nisus Writer. You won't use this feature every day, but when
  you're faced with making a change to a number of words or phrases
  that you can't change via styles or find and replace, multiple
  discontiguous select is a boon.

* Clear Formatting in Word. If some text has multiple styles (both
  manual formatting and user-defined character and paragraph styles)
  attached to it, a single command will remove all of them so you
  don't have to toggle each one off in turn. With a complex
  formatting morass, it's often simpler just to turn off all the
  formatting and start from a clean slate.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=04822>

* AutoRecover in Excel. Now, if you crash while working on an
  Excel spreadsheet, you may be able to recover changes that
  happened since your last manual save, just like in Word. The
  process of recovering your data and merging the changes into your
  document is clumsy at best in Word, and I suspect that it will be
  easiest to use the recovered document because of the difficulty of
  merging changes in a spreadsheet, but it's still a welcome
  feature.

* Customized keyboard shortcuts in Excel. Matt Neuburg noted this
  notable inconsistency between Excel and Word in both Office 98 and
  Office 2001, but it finally goes away in Office 10.

* PowerPoint packages. If a PowerPoint presentation relies on
  external files, there's now a way you can bundle them all together
  so links between the presentation and the external files don't
  break.

* Support for the Aqua interface design. With Office 2001,
  Microsoft aimed for a Platinum look to fit in with Mac OS 9 as
  well as possible. Platinum looks wrong in Mac OS X, so Microsoft
  modified hundreds of dialog boxes and icons to make them fit in
  with the rest of the Aqua interface. In some cases, using Aqua
  actually improves usability. Notable instances of this include
  shadowing behind the active cell in Excel, and more obvious
  indication that the controls around the edge of Word windows can
  be clicked.

* Support for Mac OS X's Quartz imaging model. Although Word and
  Excel retain the same typographic engine as the Mac OS 9 versions
  (so documents format identically), PowerPoint uses Quartz entirely
  to eliminate jagged edges in the large font sizes used in
  presentations. The graphics tools in all three applications
  benefit from Quartz as well, so angled lines don't have jagged
  edges, and you can apply transparency levels to graphics. That's
  especially useful in 3-D charts in Excel, where you can now see
  through some of the charted data ranges. Those relying on cross
  platform compatibility will need to be careful with these changes,
  since the transparency won't translate, and font spacing may
  change in PowerPoint presentations. But for those that work solely
  on the Mac, the new capabilities are welcome.

  Entourage wasn't part of the demo, so I can't say if there will be
  anything new there, though it should be the easiest application to
  carbonize and has the most room for new features.


**Missing in Action** -- Even Microsoft couldn't make the full
  functionality of Office 2001 available in Office 10, but the two
  omissions are relatively minor. First, without additional help
  from Apple and Palm, Microsoft wasn't able to get Palm device
  synchronization working in the Office 10 version of Entourage. I
  certainly hope that functionality will arrive as soon as possible
  as part of a free upgrade.

  Second, Microsoft chose not to implement the ODBC (Open Database
  Connectivity) features in Excel 2001 because of the amount of work
  it entailed for the very few customers who relied on it. As much
  as we hate to see the Mac version of Office lacking a feature on
  the Windows side, it seems that almost all the people who really
  need ODBC use Windows already. In the trade-off, I'd rather have
  Microsoft expending effort on performance or features that most
  Mac users will appreciate than on database connectivity few people
  will ever use. And if more people are using ODBC in Excel than
  Microsoft realizes, let them know and perhaps the feature will
  return.


**Other Programs** -- Although Office is Microsoft's flagship
  Macintosh product, they have a few more in active development. The
  free MSN Messenger for Macintosh 2.0, which is available now, is a
  Carbon application that works on Mac OS 8.6, Mac OS 9.x, or Mac OS
  X. I never used MSN Messenger for Macintosh 1.0, so I can't attest
  to its quality. It would appear to be a decent instant messaging
  client with most of the features of the Windows version, short of
  file transfer, voice, and video chat. Despite the claims in
  Microsoft's keynote at Macworld Expo, MSN Messenger's capabilities
  to invite people to chat or provide status on their typing
  activity aren't unique - for instance, they exist in the instant
  messaging features in Netopia's Timbuktu Pro. One potential
  negative to MSN Messenger is that it requires use of Microsoft
  Passport, and although Passport no longer forces you to have a
  HotMail account that you may not want, many people are incredibly
  uncomfortable with Microsoft storing their personal information,
  both because of reliability (such as a recent week-long outage for
  many Messenger users) and privacy (no single company should occupy
  that position of power, with all the possibilities for future
  abuse).

<http://www.microsoft.com/mac/messenger/messenger_default.asp>
<http://www.netopia.com/software/products/tb2/mac/>

  Even less interesting is Windows Media Player for Mac. Version 7,
  which is out now, lets Mac users play Windows Media files (they're
  roughly akin to QuickTime movies, and use the .wma filename
  extension). The next version of Windows Media Player for Mac will
  run only on Mac OS X when it ships in a few months. Why would you
  give a hoot? Purely because some content is available only in
  Windows Media format, though Microsoft also claims that songs in
  Windows Media format can be half the size of MP3 files. I doubt
  this program will go anywhere - not only will Mac users who care
  stick with Apple's QuickTime format whenever possible, but the
  name "Windows Media Player for Mac" ensures that almost no Mac
  users will even notice its existence. I assume it was politically
  necessary for the MacBU to create this program, but even those who
  aren't rabid Apple mouse-thumpers will have trouble supporting
  Windows Media format over QuickTime. Personally, I'll give it a
  pass and ask sites restricting content to Windows Media format to
  support QuickTime as well.

<http://www.microsoft.com/mac/products/mediaplayer/mediaplayer_default.asp>


**Summing Up** -- Office stalwarts Word, Excel, and PowerPoint are
  mature applications with relatively little room for significant
  new functionality. Nonetheless, with Office 10, Microsoft appears
  to be on target with a release that will give users a real reason
  to upgrade to Mac OS X when Office 10 debuts in a few months.

  Pricing details on Office 10 aren't yet available, but if you
  don't already own Office 2001 and don't need Excel or PowerPoint,
  Microsoft is saying that the cheapest way to get Office 10 will be
  to who buy the limited-time Word + Entourage Special Edition for
  $150 and then upgrade to Office 10 when it ships for another $150.

<http://www.microsoft.com/mac/products/office/2001/word/wordentse.asp>

  Oh, and one more thing. "Office 10" is actually a codename;
  Microsoft hasn't decided on the official name or spelling yet, but
  I wouldn't expect them to fall in behind Apple with use of the
  Roman numeral X. When we polled TidBITS readers about how they
  said Mac OS X, more than half voted for "Mac OS Ex." Apply the
  same pronunciation, said fast, to "Office X," and the human
  resources people might be calling you in for a chat about
  appropriate language in the workplace.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbpoll=58>

$$

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