Office 365
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@scottalanmiller said:
It's not bad, I use it when I work on Linux (which is more or less always.) Does the trick for basic users. Nice that you can access it anywhere, anytime.
We get a monster discount / free stuff, but only parts of O365 so you've helped me greatly to sort through and narrow down. I think we'll stay with 2013 this year and look at O365 next year for just office stuff, no hosting or bells/whistles.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@MattSpeller said:
Ok thank you - so it's nothing like google's browser based offerings? Still install as usual and go?
Correct. Nothing like that.
That does exist. But that's a different thing. If you get Office 365 E3 (Hosted Exchange, Skype for Business, SharePoint, ODFB and Office) then you get both on premises Office 2016 as well as the Sharepoint-powered Office Online. So yes, there is something like Google's online offering, but it is not a "versus" situation. In any situation where you can get the online version, you can get the on premises as well. So it isn't "this or that" it is "this or this AND that".
FTFY
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@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@MattSpeller said:
Ok thank you - so it's nothing like google's browser based offerings? Still install as usual and go?
Correct. Nothing like that.
That does exist. But that's a different thing. If you get Office 365 E3 (Hosted Exchange, Skype for Business, SharePoint, ODFB and Office) then you get both on premises Office 2016 as well as the Sharepoint-powered Office Online. So yes, there is something like Google's online offering, but it is not a "versus" situation. In any situation where you can get the online version, you canget the on premises as well. So it isn't "this or that" it is "this or this AND that".
FTFY
Can you get it without the on premises?
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@MattSpeller said:
Ok thank you - so it's nothing like google's browser based offerings? Still install as usual and go?
Correct. Nothing like that.
That does exist. But that's a different thing. If you get Office 365 E3 (Hosted Exchange, Skype for Business, SharePoint, ODFB and Office) then you get both on premises Office 2016 as well as the Sharepoint-powered Office Online. So yes, there is something like Google's online offering, but it is not a "versus" situation. In any situation where you can get the online version, you canget the on premises as well. So it isn't "this or that" it is "this or this AND that".
FTFY
Can you get it without the on premises?
yeah, maybe not in the E series, but the SMB series yes.. I do in fact through NTG.
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@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@MattSpeller said:
Ok thank you - so it's nothing like google's browser based offerings? Still install as usual and go?
Correct. Nothing like that.
That does exist. But that's a different thing. If you get Office 365 E3 (Hosted Exchange, Skype for Business, SharePoint, ODFB and Office) then you get both on premises Office 2016 as well as the Sharepoint-powered Office Online. So yes, there is something like Google's online offering, but it is not a "versus" situation. In any situation where you can get the online version, you canget the on premises as well. So it isn't "this or that" it is "this or this AND that".
FTFY
Can you get it without the on premises?
yeah, maybe not in the E series, but the SMB series yes.. I do in fact through NTG.
Oh, did not know that. I never look at those and was not aware that they added that option.
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Just so we're on the same page, in the SMB packages for $5/month I get hosted Exchange, Sharepoint, ODfB, Skype for Business and the online version of Office apps.
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Yeah office online is in all of them, Exchange Online is the only one where online versions of Office are missing.
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@Dashrender said:
Just so we're on the same page, in the SMB packages for $5/month I get hosted Exchange, Sharepoint, ODfB, Skype for Business and the online version of Office apps.
That a limited version of Office apps though.
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@BRRABill said:
@Dashrender said:
Just so we're on the same page, in the SMB packages for $5/month I get hosted Exchange, Sharepoint, ODfB, Skype for Business and the online version of Office apps.
That a limited version of Office apps though.
Not limited, it's online. Different products. I could equally call the on premises limited because you have to install it. What matters is that they are two different things, not one being a crippled version of the other.
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@scottalanmiller said:
Not limited, it's online. Different products. I could equally call the on premises limited because you have to install it. What matters is that they are two different things, not one being a crippled version of the other.
What I mean is that I also have the $5 plan, and the online versions they give you are limited in what they can do.
For example, you can't freeze panes in Excel. You have to use desktop Excel for that.
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@Breffni-Potter said:
Yeah office online is in all of them, Exchange Online is the only one where online versions of Office are missing.
Actually the Office Pro Plus package also does not include the Online Apps either.
Which reminds me...
Why the hell does MS include the Office Pro Plus only option in their list of O365 offerings, but purely hosted Exchange for $4/m/u is not - hmm.. because they don't really want to sell it? they really want to sell the package only deals? hmmm.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@BRRABill said:
@Dashrender said:
Just so we're on the same page, in the SMB packages for $5/month I get hosted Exchange, Sharepoint, ODfB, Skype for Business and the online version of Office apps.
That a limited version of Office apps though.
Not limited, it's online. Different products. I could equally call the on premises limited because you have to install it. What matters is that they are two different things, not one being a crippled version of the other.
The set of features available to the online version, save concurrent editing, is a subset of the local install. To most, the semantics would point to the online version being a crippled version of the local install.
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@scottalanmiller said:
Or are you saying the "Office Online" they give you in the $5 is the same they give you in the higher priced package that includes desktop installs?
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@BRRABill said:
@scottalanmiller said:
Not limited, it's online. Different products. I could equally call the on premises limited because you have to install it. What matters is that they are two different things, not one being a crippled version of the other.
What I mean is that I also have the $5 plan, and the online versions they give you are limited in what they can do.
For example, you can't freeze panes in Excel. You have to use desktop Excel for that.
Well sure - but as Scott said - they are their own product. Sure they share the name Excel - but it's Online Excel, versus locally installed Excel.
and those features will come, it's just going to take time.
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@Dashrender said:
Well sure - but as Scott said - they are their own product. Sure they share the name Excel - but it's Online Excel, versus locally installed Excel.
and those features will come, it's just going to take time.
I thought they had two different versions.
A "free" version that had less features, a a version that came with the desktop-install packages that was basically the same as the desktop versions.
This is wrong?
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@BRRABill said:
@scottalanmiller said:
Or are you saying the "Office Online" they give you in the $5 is the same they give you in the higher priced package that includes desktop installs?
yep, saying that too. The online versions are the same no matter what package you buy that includes them.
There's no crippled version of the online apps.
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@Dashrender said:
yep, saying that too. The online versions are the same no matter what package you buy that includes them.
There's no crippled version of the online apps.
Ohhhhhhhhhh.
Well that's dumb.
My goal to be ML-compliant and get away from local stuff is getting harder and harder each day!
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What I like about O365 subscription is you get to license Office Apps per User rather than per device.
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@BRRABill said:
My goal to be ML-compliant and get away from local stuff is getting harder and harder each day!
I'll drink to that
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Alright - y'all are awesome, but I need a round up for all this info.
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We have users working with limited or no internet often. What version of O365 comes with local installs?
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Are there any cloud storage components I should be aware of? (our data can't leave Canada for reasons)
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If the online version does send data to hell and gone is it possible to have only a local install and block the online logins?
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Can you get a version that's local only and save money? We host our own exchange ducks to avoid incomming abuse
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