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Something that I've found baffling for a number of years now:
The vast majority of computer buyers still seem (to me) to base their computer purchasing decision around whether the computer will run Microsoft Word (or rather, Microsoft Office).
This may have made sense back when Microsoft Word was a decent word processor, but now it's a bloated mess. There must hundreds of thousands of man hours wasted every day, from people trying to fiddle with Microsoft Word in order to get their lists to number properly, etc..
Or am I wrong? Do people feel that Microsoft Word (despite a few flaws) is still a great app and that they would continue to use it (even if document compatibility wasn't an issue)?
Kap
The vast majority of computer buyers still seem (to me) to base their computer purchasing decision around whether the computer will run Microsoft Word (or rather, Microsoft Office).
This may have made sense back when Microsoft Word was a decent word processor, but now it's a bloated mess. There must hundreds of thousands of man hours wasted every day, from people trying to fiddle with Microsoft Word in order to get their lists to number properly, etc..
Or am I wrong? Do people feel that Microsoft Word (despite a few flaws) is still a great app and that they would continue to use it (even if document compatibility wasn't an issue)?
Kap