Office Requirements and Trial for RDS 08r2
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@dafyre said:
@Dashrender said:
Agreed, no reason it shouldn't work. Though I would ask why you'd consider deploying a 5+ year old OS? The cost of the Windows server license compared to the RDS licenses shouldn't be bad enough to warrant staying on something so old.
He's got a good point... Why not start with Server 2012 R2?
Even that is really close to being "one generation old." Yeah, still some months until the new server releases, but the previews are out. 2012 R2 is anything but old, but it is very mature.
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@mlnews said:
@dafyre said:
@Dashrender said:
Agreed, no reason it shouldn't work. Though I would ask why you'd consider deploying a 5+ year old OS? The cost of the Windows server license compared to the RDS licenses shouldn't be bad enough to warrant staying on something so old.
He's got a good point... Why not start with Server 2012 R2?
Even that is really close to being "one generation old." Yeah, still some months until the new server releases, but the previews are out. 2012 R2 is anything but old, but it is very mature.
Yeah I was thinking the same thing - but I'm not sure I'd want to roll out Server 2015/16 whatever they call it as soon as they release it, assuming the OP can even wait that long.
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@Dashrender said:
Yeah I was thinking the same thing - but I'm not sure I'd want to roll out Server 2015/16 whatever they call it as soon as they release it, assuming the OP can even wait that long.
Why not? Let's start a new thread to discuss that as I think there is a misconception around the software maturity model here but don't want to derail this thread. There is a good discussion around this to be had, though.
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@Dashrender said:
Hold on, Libre Office isn't free anymore? or is @Breffni-Potter talking about MS Office?
*Edit - looks like it is still free. Just download it and give it a try.
...Yes I'm talking about MS Office Should have said.
In my brain "Office" means Microsoft Office by default.
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@Breffni-Potter said:
In my brain "Office" means Microsoft Office by default.
If capitalized, it always does. It's like "Chevy Camaro". Chevy is who makes it, Camaro is the product name. MS Office is Office, made by Microsoft. Office is its proper name.
LibreOffice is the name of LibreOffice. It is not another product named Office made by a company called Libre. It is a product called LibreOffice made by The Document Foundation.
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1.Because they already have 08r2 servers....
2. Does libre office work with MS office Macros? -
@hubtechagain said:
- Does libre office work with MS office Macros?
Not the last that I knew. It supports macros but I believe only its own.
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Oh, this is old but they had some support even three years ago...
http://ask.libreoffice.org/en/question/6621/import-ms-word-macros/
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Yeah I was thinking the same thing - but I'm not sure I'd want to roll out Server 2015/16 whatever they call it as soon as they release it, assuming the OP can even wait that long.
Why not? Let's start a new thread to discuss that as I think there is a misconception around the software maturity model here but don't want to derail this thread. There is a good discussion around this to be had, though.
Heck we are planning to upgrade our desktops (approx 8,000) to all windows 10 within the first 6 months. Most of that wait will be for making the images and testing.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
Heck we are planning to upgrade our desktops (approx 8,000) to all windows 10 within the first 6 months. Most of that wait will be for making the images and testing.
We moved months ago. As an MSP it is very valuable to be running ahead of the curve because we need to see stuff before clients, not with them.
Although really, Windows 10 is a minor update and there is little to worry about. As long as your apps don't complain, you are likely good. We've seen great stability even during the beta and RC period.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@thecreativeone91 said:
Heck we are planning to upgrade our desktops (approx 8,000) to all windows 10 within the first 6 months. Most of that wait will be for making the images and testing.
We moved months ago. As an MSP it is very valuable to be running ahead of the curve because we need to see stuff before clients, not with them.
Although really, Windows 10 is a minor update and there is little to worry about. As long as your apps don't complain, you are likely good. We've seen great stability even during the beta and RC period.
We mostly use Microsoft software (Office, MS Dynamics/GP), Autodesk (AutoCAD, Inventor, Civil etc) and some other BIM stuff. Then the rest is all in house developed by our in house DevOPs team.
I'm currently looking at server upgrades while they do the desktop stuff. Some of it will just go to Server 2012 r2 for now. Being on the latest versions seems to have good befits for us, as our third fail over location is Azure and the integration keeps getting better.