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Microsoft Word 2007

By Elsa Wenzel on 09/02/2007

More Microsoft reviews , RRP: AU$249.00

The good:

  • Built-in blogging and live previews of font and image styles
  • Better displays for complex features, eg. references, mass mailing
  • New, smaller file formats with improved document security
  • Better integrated with the rest of Office

The bad:

  • All commands have been moved
  • Contextual tabs and style galleries can be distracting
  • Converters required for 2007 files to be viewed in Words 2000 to 2003
  • No free way to save work to the Web

The bottomline:

If you're ready to let go of old habits from previous versions of Word and want to make sleeker-looking documents, Microsoft Word 2007 is worth the upgrade. However, less-expensive alternatives handle its core features without the clutter.

Editors' rating:

7.8/10

Users' rating:

5.5/10

Tags:

2007 | microsoft | office | word

Microsoft Word 2007's document types, interface, and some features -- very nearly every aspect of this word processor -- have changed. With this update, Microsoft Word 2007 becomes a more image-conscious application. New picture-editing tools help you deck out documents and play with fancy fonts. Bloggers and researchers may also benefit. It's easier to get a handle on document security, but those who only need basic typing features may not want to relearn the interface or deal with the new file formats.

Our installation of various Office suites on Windows XP computers took between 10 and 20 minutes, which was quicker than prior editions of Office. You'll have to be online to access services later, such as Help and How-To as well as Clip Art and document templates. Our reviews of Microsoft Office 2007 detail the installation process and the ingredients of each edition.

Word 2007

Word 2007 will operate in Compatibility Mode, shutting off some of the new graphics-rich features, should you, for example, open a Word 2003 DOC file without converting it to the new DOCX format.

Interface
Once you have Word 2007 running, you will notice a completely redesigned toolbar, now known as the Ribbon, with many familiar commands in new places. Instead of the old, grey drop-down menus atop the page, Microsoft's new and very colourful Ribbon clumps common features into tabs: Home, Insert, Page Layout, References, Mailings, Review, and View. Some tabs don't show up until you might need them; for example, you must select a picture to bring up its formatting tab. At first, you'll need to wander around to find what's moved from prior versions of Word. Clicking the Office 2007 logo in the upper-left corner drops down a menu of staple functions -- such as opening, saving, and printing files -- that were under Word 2003's File menu. We had the hardest time locating commands from Word 2003's Editing and Tools menus. To insert a comment in Word 2007, for instance, you must look under the Review tab instead of the Insert tab. Prepare to relearn Word. Alas, there is no "classic" view to help you make the transition to the 2007 version.

While it's a challenge to upgrade, those learning Word for the first time may find its features easier to stumble upon than they would have with Word 2003. For instance, the new interface better presents page view options that used to be a hassle to get to. From the View tab, now you can simply check a box to see a ruler or gridlines, or click the Arrange All button to stack various open Word documents atop each other. Although we sometimes mixed up the placement of commands within the Review and References tabs, those features were still easier to find than in Word 2003.

Microsoft placed a lot of emphasis on the wow factor of Office's galleries of graphics, which share the Aero look of Windows Vista and are found throughout the Office applications. Pull-down menus of fonts, colour themes, and images let you preview changes on the page before making them. And thankfully, Microsoft killed Clippy, the cartoonish helper. Now a less-intrusive quick formatting toolbar shows up near your cursor. Keyboard shortcuts remain the same; pressing the Alt key displays the corresponding quick key for each Ribbon command. A running word count is always present in the lower-left corner, and the new slider bar for zooming in and out is a terrific, no-brainer improvement, particularly for the vision impaired.

Features
Aside from the interface, the other radical change in Word 2007 is its new file type. For the first time in a decade, Microsoft foists a new file format upon users, and old Word DOC files make way for the new DOCX type of Word 2007. Microsoft has taken steps to ease this transition, but we anticipate that it will not be smooth for many users.

Word 2007

Word 2007's new Picture Tools options let you hover over galleries of changes to preview how they'll look. In the past, you may have applied a change out of curiosity, then hit Undo when it didn't meet your expectations.

What happens when you're sharing work with people who use an older version of Word? Word 2003 and 2000 are supposed to detect when you first try to open a DOCX file, then prompt you to download and install an Office 2007 Compatibility Pack. After you've done this, the older Word should convert your Word 2007 files and remove incompatible features. When you reopen that same DOCX file again in Word 2007, the file's original elements are supposed to stay intact. On the other hand, if you open an older DOC file within Word 2007, it will also run in Compatibility Mode, shutting off access to some of the newer program features, which explains why two documents within Word 2007 may display different formatting options.

Among the small tweaks in Word 2007 that make formatting easier, rollover style galleries let you preview the changes. However, the constant shape-shifting of the galleries can be distracting. And some options, such as for adjusting margins, use an older-style dialog box rather than the live preview menus.

Still, it takes just a couple of clicks to insert a JPEG, a GIF, a BMP, a PNG, or another image type. Click the graphic, and the Picture Tools Format tab lets you tweak the brightness, the colour mode, and the contrast of a picture. You can also rotate it, crop it, skew its angle, add 3D effects and shadows to its borders, and convert it to all manner of shapes, such as a thought bubble, an arrow, or a star. Options for positioning an image and wrapping text around it are also front and center, which should be helpful for creating professional-looking business documents, as well as casual party invitations. You don't get nearly the amount of control offered by Microsoft Publisher, QuarkXPress, or Adobe InDesign, but Word 2007 may do the trick for ultrabasic desktop-publishing needs.

For those who don't need all the formatting choices, we're glad that Word 2007 doesn't apply a complex style to our text by default. In Word 2003, we'd have to highlight all the text, and then Clear Formatting to remove unwanted indentations and bold letters. In Word 2007, Calibri, a crisp, default font, replaces the standard Times New Roman from Word 2003. You can choose from galleries of text styles, such as Emphasis, Strong, or Book Title, and easily create your own styles and set them as a default.

Word 2007

The Prepare menu offers choices for inspecting, encrypting, and restricting access to your Word files in addition to checking to see how its elements will appear in older versions of Word.

While Corel WordPerfect has traditionally offered better features for managing longer documents, Microsoft Word 2007 has improved a bit in this regard. For those working on a dissertation or book report, the References tab lets you manage citations and bibliographies in styles from APA to Turabian. Just click Next Footnote, and the cursor takes you there. However, the Table of Contents feature still isn't easy to figure out.

Editors who collaborate on documents with others can make use of the Review tab. The new Compare pull-down menu lets you look at two versions of the same document side by side, as well as merge changes from several authors and editors into one file. Administrative assistants and those charged with mass-mailing tasks should find those features much easier to access than in Word 2003. Bloggers can now compose and post entries to their Web sites without leaving Word.

If you deal with sensitive information -- in a private diary entry, a resume, or a company financial statement, for example -- Word 2007 allows more control over buried data, such as the original author's name or your supervisor's cursing comments. Office 2007's Prepare options step you through inspecting that metadata, as well as adding a digital signature and encrypting a file. You'll also find some of these options under the Review tab's Protect button. However, should you plan to black out text, you'll have to turn to Adobe Acrobat 8 to make secure redactions (highlighting the font in black within Word won't do it).

As integration has improved throughout Office 2007, you can click Send from the Office logo menu to attach a Word document to an e-mail message through Outlook's composition window. A message recipient using Outlook 2007 can preview that Word document within the e-mail message pane. And if you paste an Excel 2007 chart into a Word 2007 file, just right-click the chart and select Edit Data to launch Excel in split-pane view. When you change the source data within Excel, the chart adjusts in Word.

Unfortunately, Microsoft isn't providing an option for storing or editing Word files online to most users who buy below the AU$1,150 Ultimate edition of Office, and there's no browser-based version of Word. Need to collaborate on a file with specific people or take work on the road? At this time, you may have to e-mail those documents. Alternately, you could upload a Word file into one of the many free, Web-based word processors served up by other companies, including Zoho Writer, which offers a free upload add-in for Word 2007.

Word 2007

Options for blogging include an editing interface that lets you insert art and charts and lets you post entries without leaving Word.

Conclusion
Is Word 2007 worth the upgrade? If you primarily work with plain text and don't need to pretty up reports and newsletters and the like, then it might not be right for you. For our purposes as editors, for instance, Word 2007 doesn't introduce must-have goodies, although commenting commands are within easier reach. At the same time, Word 2007 handily presents options for footnotes and citations under its References tab, which researchers should appreciate. Mail-merge functions are also easier to reach. Bloggers might use Word's posting tools in a pinch, but we found Word 2007's rebuilt HTML to be clunky still. Above all, Microsoft's new word processor is most upgrade-worthy if you want to play with pictures, charts, and diagrams in addition to text.

yme
21/05/2008, 02:31 AM

rating
8
/10

This is a good piece of software.

Pros: If you're willing to to take the time to learn some of the nuances of the software, you'll be rewarded with some great productivity enhancers and the ability to create some nice documents.

Cons: 1) If you're not dedicated to taking the time to learn the new interface, you'll be miserable with the new interface.

2) Microsoft Office 2007 treats every file as some sort of compressed file that may cause problems later.

3) The interface may be a little intimidating to the, "Man, I was just getting used to the last version of Microsoft Word" group.

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Ann
08/05/2008, 08:09 AM

rating
5
/10

I am a Word 2002 user who had no problem opening a .docx

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nilloc
03/03/2008, 03:38 PM

rating
4
/10

this is not one for the beginner, and enen for the exspert with older version

Pros: nill

Cons: screan to cluterd

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engineer007
14/01/2008, 04:13 AM

rating
2
/10

How to ruin a decent piece of software and destroy productivity for millions.

Pros: None that I can think of - oh, you can save it as a PDF but it doesn't generate bookmarks

Cons: Too many to list. Compatibility, but mostly the horrific user interface

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Phoebus
19/12/2007, 03:18 AM

rating
4
/10

We are a workgroup that now is using different versions of Word. We can't exchange tips anymore how to achieve a specific result because our versions behave so differently. I personally am fairly good at working with Word, but I'm having a hard time figuring out how to do anything in the 2007 version.

Pros: Pretty, maybe easier to learn for a novice.

Cons: Huge waste of time if you're used to an earlier version. Don't upgrade unless you never learned how to use the earlier version you had.

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jollymunkie
17/07/2007, 05:29 PM

rating
9
/10

As a student who has to do a lot of research I am loving this. The reference tab is great. The Table is Contents is wonderful. This saves me a lot of time. It just looks neat and clean. After you have use it for a few days, go back to an old version, and you will wonder how you managed.

Pros: Easy to get around. Refence section. Title pages. Online dictonary. Easy formating.

Cons: It can be a little confusing at first, but then it gets good. Compatability with other computers.

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mralantitchmarsh
05/07/2007, 08:20 AM

rating
2
/10

do u think they thought about computer illiterate when designing office 2007? Well I know my way round the old version of word backwards, however word 2007 I spend 10 minutes looking for the features, and still cannot find them. I have uninstalled 2007 version because it takes far too long to complete any work due the changes Microsoft have made

Pros: can't think of any

Cons: old version of word is saved with .doc extensions; the new version has .docx extension. If you send a document with .docx to a user of the older version of word they cannot open it. Sure, 2007 version of word gives option what extension you want to save it as, but how are you supposed to know what version of word your friends/workmates have, to know what to save it as? Try sending a word document to 10 people with a .docx - I bet 5 bucks you will get nine complaints back that the document will not open.

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Harpua
10/05/2007, 02:23 PM

rating
4
/10

It's okay. I have not had a chance to use all the programs. I found the new layout in word to be a bit confusing.

Pros: Newer office installation. Always happy to have a new product.

Cons: I really dislike the redesigned interface and layout. If Microsoft really wanted people to purchase this product, they no doubt would have given an option to operate in the "Classic" view like they had in Windows XP. What can I say? I'm old school.

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Martin Gifford
01/05/2007, 01:06 PM

rating
5
/10

It's easier for some people to use, but it's a case of one step forward, one step backward. 95% interface customising ability has been removed. Microsoft is sure that it knows what's best for you.

Pros: Prettier and probably more reliable. Still more reliable than Open Office.

Cons: Interface customising ability is mostly gone. You can no longer move toolbars, menus, buttons, etc. Reorganising the screen is the first thing experienced users would do, but now that option is gone.

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Crhis
04/03/2007, 08:26 AM

rating
9
/10

Thanks for telling me where the word count was - it has been driving me crazy spending the past 15 minutes searching for it.
the old microsoft seemed easy but I can tell that the more I use this new package the more I will like it depsite these initial frustrations.

Pros: Looks like it can equp you with real tools to give a professional image

Cons: Takes a while to work out what's what.

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