Re: Another great example of how Word 2007 "brings commands closer to the surface"
- From: "Larry" <larry328NOSPAM@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 8 Apr 2007 21:58:35 -0400
Ok, Beth, I understand that you feel it's impossible to persuade me that
trashing and replacing Word's total interface and method of operation was
for the Greater Good.
"Beth Melton" <bmelton@xxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:%23CcCq7jeHHA.5056@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Styles were merely an example that came to mind at the time.you
You know, Larry, just based on previous discussions I've had with you on
topics of an even more simiplic nature I know there nothing I can say to
that will change your mind...months
Please post all follow-up questions to the newsgroup. Requests for
assistance by email can not be acknowledged.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Beth Melton
"Larry" <larry328NOSPAM@xxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:eS9Ye7ieHHA.4136@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
There are two separate issues here. You say that 2007 has improved
features. I don't question that. My question is, was it necessary to
remake the entire Word user interface to produce these new features?
Let's
say that Styles works better in 2007. Fine. Was it necessary to
eliminate
the toolbars and replace the file menu by the Microsoft Office button in
order to improve the Styles feature? If you can't answer yes to that
question and similar questions, then you have not justified the total
remake
of Word in 2007.
This is not a matter of whether I and others are "closed-minded" to Word
2007's good features. It's a matter of whether the destruction of the
total
user interface of Word was needed to arrive at those good features.
"Beth Melton" <bmelton@xxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:uFD4VoZeHHA.4604@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
I didn't say it took months, I was saying that I've spent over 18
thenusing Office 2007 and feel as though I have an "educated" opinion ofthings.
I was very opinionated about a few things, just as most who have onlyviewed
scratched the surface, but then I realized I was viewing things as I
my switch from WP 5.0 to Word, or WordBasic to Visual Basic. It was
gainedI
decided to hold off forming an opinion on various matters until I
Imore insight. There are still things I don't like but there were things
adidn't like in the older versions as well.
To be perfectly honest, I think I could type until my fingers are blue,
as
opposed to talking until I'm blue in the face (<g>), and it won't make
will,bit
of difference. Those who want to view the change with an open mind
WPthose who don't, won't. It's like trying to tell convince a hard-core
15usercompletely
of the benefits of Word. ;-)
Please post all follow-up questions to the newsgroup. Requests for
assistance by email can not be acknowledged.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Beth Melton
Microsoft Office MVP
Co-author of Word 2007 Inside Out:
http://www.microsoft.com/MSPress/books/9801.aspx#AboutTheBook
Word FAQ: http://mvps.org/word
TechTrax eZine: http://mousetrax.com/techtrax/
MVP FAQ site: http://mvps.org/
"Larry" <larry328NOSPAM@xxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:eKWSWHUeHHA.3536@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Beth,
What you're saying is that you had to spend months of your life
re-learning and re-customizing Word to your needs, with the previous
redesignsomeyears you had spent learning Word being lost, all for the benefit of
marginal improvements in the efficiency of some tasks.
Second, the improvements you mention did NOT require the total
categoryof
createthe interface. For example, you write:
Plus those who were familiar with some of the advanced features willlikely find them
easier to use. One quick example is AutoText. Previously you had to
calleda
style and associate the entries with the style in order to create an
organized AutoText menu. Now it's a matter of creating what is now
a
Building Blocks and assigning it to a gallery and a specific
destroyitselfusing
a dialog box.
Well, AutoText could have been changed without, e.g., getting rid of
Toolbars and menus!
Similarly, greater ease of use in learning Styles did not require a
radically revamped Word. It just required that the Styles feature
be
changed.
I have nothing against MS adding new features to Word. But to
itthe
basic user interface of Word and basic features and capabilities that
millions of people have invested many years of work in, and replace
thewith
another, is just wrong.
"Beth Melton" <bmelton@xxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:uftwizTeHHA.1244@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
I've been using Office 2007 for over 18 months and at first, like
somefail,majority I hated it. I thought MS made a bad move, it was going to
and
so on. I don't feel that way anymore. (Heh, you should have seen
upof
reallymy
"persuasive feedback" - the comments you've made are mild incustomization.
comparison -
especially when it came to removing the ease in toolbar/menu
<g>).
But you know, even though I know how to customize the Ribbon it's
not
necessary for me to customize it for my every day work. I have come
atemplateswith
alternate methods that fit my needs. For example I have several
stillthat have a customized QAT with commands for specific tasks and I
load/unload them as global templates according the task at hand. (I
doeshave a complaint about the inability to float toolbars....)
After using the new interface I can now honestly see how it actually
improve work flow and I can perform tasks in Word that used to take
Pluswerehalf
hour or more in a few simple clicks. And it places capabilities that
once used exclusively by power users into the hands of everyone.
findthose
who were familiar with some of the advanced features will likely
categorycalledthema
easier to use. One quick example is AutoText. Previously you had to
create
style and associate the entries with the style in order to create an
organized AutoText menu. Now it's a matter of creating what is now
a
Building Blocks and assigning it to a gallery and a specific
functionalitythem,using
a dialog box. And there was difficulty remembering what you called
now
they are more visually oriented for insertion (and yes you can stillassign
keyboard shortcuts if you want).
Form development is another example. The ability to easily create
bound
forms in Word has been a long standing request and that
withoutis
now
available using Content Controls AND they automatically update
resolvethe
need to add extra steps or use a macro. Content Controls also
todataanother long standing request, to protect portions of a document for
Andentry without losing spell check and other functionality.Even
Oh, and Styles have been lifted up and are easier for beginners to
use.
the basic beginner books are including how to use and modify styles.
I've noticed many of the beginning Word books are encouraging users
touse
formatted space between paragraphs instead of empty paragraphs due
can'tthe
new defaults. (Thank goodness!!)
BUT in order to fully see and understand these capabilities one
Ibe
resistant to change. That was my stumbling block for several months.
"goodwanted Word (and the other Office apps) to function as I washave
accustomed
to
them functioning for over the last 15 years. To use the new versions
effectively it does require a bit of change, such as change how you
may
previously accomplished a task but in the end it is faster and morechange.
efficient. The key is if you want to embrace the change or fight the
If you fight it then you'll hate it and find it lacking. If you
embrace
it
you may just find what I have found, that change can indeed be a
harderthing".
Please post all follow-up questions to the newsgroup. Requests for
assistance by email can not be acknowledged.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Beth Melton
Microsoft Office MVP
Co-author of Word 2007 Inside Out:
http://www.microsoft.com/MSPress/books/9801.aspx#AboutTheBook
Word FAQ: http://mvps.org/word
TechTrax eZine: http://mousetrax.com/techtrax/
MVP FAQ site: http://mvps.org/
"Larry" <larry328NOSPAM@xxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:ePicUCKeHHA.320@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Beth,
You've opened my eyes. Now I understand the logic behind
Microsoft's
destruction of Word. By the same logic by which the menus were
eliminated,
since the "majority" of users don't create custom toolbars and
custom
menus,
MS just did away with them as well. Or at least made it much
anyto
create and install them--I haven't figured this all out yet. In
putcase,
boxthe former beautiful feature by which you opened the Customize
dialog
and could effortllessly create a new toolbar and give it a name
neveron
it
what you wanted seems to be gone.
Hey, folks, the "majority" of users also never create a macro,
smallbuilt-inedit
a
macro, and never assign a custom keystroke to a macro or to a
userscommand. So, by MS's logic of only keeping features that "most"
eliminateuse,
how come MS didn't eliminate VBA, eliminate macro recording,
andmacros, eliminate the Macro dialog box, eliminate the VBA editing
interface,
and eliminate the Customize Keyboard dialog box???
The great thing about Word was that it had thousands of
capabilities,
each user, depending on his interests, might only deal with a
nowpart
of
them. So each person could in effect have his own "Word." But
singlewe've
moved away from such diversity toward a single uniformity. A
Wordpercent"majority rule" determines what will be in Word. Only what the 90
of users who are mediocre users will determine what is in Word.
Everything
that a more skilled and creative or just idiosyncratic user of
thatmight
want to access is to be eliminated. That appears to be the logic.
The only thing that saves the situation from total disaster is
soMS
has
not yet been completely consistent in its program of destruction,
it
has
still left some "non-popular" features in place.
Larry
.
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