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Nov 28, 2010
22,670
31
located
Probably not, as MS Office 2004 for Mac came one year after MS Office 2003, MS Office 2008 for Mac came one year after MS Office 2007, MS Office 2011 for Mac came one year after MS Office 2010.
Therefore it is likely, that MS Office 2014 for Mac might be the Mac OS X version of MS Office.
 

chrise2

macrumors 6502a
Sep 17, 2012
504
70
I first heard that they weren't going to do it. But if you goto Microsoft's site, they say if you buy Office 2011 now, you get the new version for free. Which usually means that the next version is coming out soon... I hope so. Office 2013 and Lync 2013 are awesome and I'd love to see some of those features make it over to OS X.
 

bogatyr

macrumors 65816
Mar 13, 2012
1,127
1
I first heard that they weren't going to do it. But if you goto Microsoft's site, they say if you buy Office 2011 now, you get the new version for free. Which usually means that the next version is coming out soon... I hope so. Office 2013 and Lync 2013 are awesome and I'd love to see some of those features make it over to OS X.

It is unlikely Lync will be ported. They only have the 4 main apps on OS X. Also they are typically stripped down compared to the Windows versions. Outlook being the worst offender.
 

SpyderBite

macrumors 65816
Oct 4, 2011
1,262
8
Xanadu
From what I understand from some former coworkers in Redmond; there will be no pc/Mac version.. Office 360 is being pushed hard and like Intuit and Adobe future versions of the software will not be available on physical media. Subscribe to the cloud version (Office 360) or download your installable version.
 

chrfr

macrumors G5
Jul 11, 2009
13,520
7,045
It is unlikely Lync will be ported. They only have the 4 main apps on OS X.
Lync for Mac does exist. Whether it shows up with the next Office revision is a different question altogether.
 

Intell

macrumors P6
Jan 24, 2010
18,955
509
Inside
It is unlikely Lync will be ported. They only have the 4 main apps on OS X. Also they are typically stripped down compared to the Windows versions. Outlook being the worst offender.

Lync does exist on Macs. Although I think it's still called Communicator. Office 2011 is extremely identical to Office 2010. While Office X through Office 2008 were organized differently, they all had the same feature set as their Windows counterparts. Yes, Entourage was a strange hold over from the times of yore, but it worked. Outlook 2011 is very much the same as Outlook 2010 though. (I miss Outlook 2007...)
 

chrfr

macrumors G5
Jul 11, 2009
13,520
7,045
Lync does exist on Macs. Although I think it's still called Communicator.
Nope, it's called Lync.

Office 2011 is extremely identical to Office 2010...Outlook 2011 is very much the same as Outlook 2010 though. (I miss Outlook 2007...)
Outlook 2011 for Mac and 2010 for Windows are nothing alike. They don't offer the same features and don't connect to Exchange servers the same way.
 

swerve147

macrumors 6502a
Jan 12, 2013
837
114
I first heard that they weren't going to do it. But if you goto Microsoft's site, they say if you buy Office 2011 now, you get the new version for free. Which usually means that the next version is coming out soon... I hope so. Office 2013 and Lync 2013 are awesome and I'd love to see some of those features make it over to OS X.

The new "version" in that free upgrade offer is 12 free months of Office 365 (link).
 

Intell

macrumors P6
Jan 24, 2010
18,955
509
Inside
Nope, it's called Lync. Outlook 2011 for Mac and 2010 for Windows are nothing alike. They don't offer the same features and don't connect to Exchange servers the same way.

The 2008 version of Lync/Communicator was called Communicator. One of the big selling points for Office 2011, is how similar Office 2010 and 2011 are. They are extremely similar. Excluding OS dependent features, they're nearly identical with the same feature set. When connecting to a Exchange 2010 server, they work in the same fashion. Office 2011 does have a few issues with Exchange 2007. However, those issues can be mitigated by using Mac OS X's built in Exchange support.
 

Chuck-Norris

macrumors 6502a
Original poster
Sep 17, 2012
850
1
The 2008 version of Lync/Communicator was called Communicator. One of the big selling points for Office 2011, is how similar Office 2010 and 2011 are. They are extremely similar. Excluding OS dependent features, they're nearly identical with the same feature set. When connecting to a Exchange 2010 server, they work in the same fashion. Office 2011 does have a few issues with Exchange 2007. However, those issues can be mitigated by using Mac OS X's built in Exchange support.

Mac version is missing onenote as well :(
 

bogatyr

macrumors 65816
Mar 13, 2012
1,127
1
Lync does exist on Macs. Although I think it's still called Communicator. Office 2011 is extremely identical to Office 2010. While Office X through Office 2008 were organized differently, they all had the same feature set as their Windows counterparts. Yes, Entourage was a strange hold over from the times of yore, but it worked. Outlook 2011 is very much the same as Outlook 2010 though. (I miss Outlook 2007...)

Ah so I missed that with Lync.

However, Outlook 2011 is not near as capable as 2010. Many group emails with special options are not available (i.e. voting), no archive access (big issue), and there were a few other ones but I stopped using it a while back and use 2010 through a VM now.

EDIT: This is with Exchange 2010 on Office 365 hosting.
 

xShane

macrumors 6502a
Nov 2, 2012
814
37
United States
Click here.

It appears there will not be Office 2013 for Mac.

@Chuck-Norris

I too, dislike, that there is no Onenote for Mac. I've used it on Windows and it is hands down, the best note-taking application (specifically for school). I guess I just have to stick with Evernote for now...
 

locoboi187

macrumors 6502a
Oct 3, 2012
711
375
Click here.

It appears there will not be Office 2013 for Mac.

@Chuck-Norris

I too, dislike, that there is no Onenote for Mac. I've used it on Windows and it is hands down, the best note-taking application (specifically for school). I guess I just have to stick with Evernote for now...

I just put Word 2011 into Notebook Layout. Works fine for me.
 

chrfr

macrumors G5
Jul 11, 2009
13,520
7,045
It appears there will not be Office 2013 for Mac.

I read that to mean that although there won't be an Office 2013 for Mac, there may be a 2014. There was no Office 2007 or 2010 for Mac either- they were always one "year" behind.
 

drambuie

macrumors 6502a
Feb 16, 2010
751
1
The new "version" in that free upgrade offer is 12 free months of Office 365 (link).

Did you click on "How it works"? You have the choice of a year's free subscription of Office 365, or a download of the Office 2013 version that's equivalent to your Office 2010 purchase.

If you buy Office Home and Student 2010 you have the choice of one year of Office 365 Home Premium, or a download of Office Home and Student 2013. For either version of Office for Mac 2011, your only option is a year of Office 365 Home Premium.
 

swerve147

macrumors 6502a
Jan 12, 2013
837
114
Did you click on "How it works"? You have the choice of a year's free subscription of Office 365, or a download of the Office 2013 version that's equivalent to your Office 2010 purchase.

If you buy Office Home and Student 2010 you have the choice of one year of Office 365 Home Premium, or a download of Office Home and Student 2013. For either version of Office for Mac 2011, your only option is a year of Office 365 Home Premium.

I assumed Office for Mac 2011 in my original quote. I also seriously doubt that Office 2013 for Mac will be offered in this promotion as it hasn't even been officially announced.

I suppose if you BootCamp or use Parallels and the Windows version on your Mac then you're in the clear.
 
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