![]() The “do harm to Apple” bit is quoted out of context. I only read half of the memo, but I have a hard time seeing how it could hurt Microsoft. What evidence is there that Microsoft would take their premier desktop database app and retire it? Solely the existence of similar products that are not even remotely as widely deployed and not at all compatible? And Access is still integrated into Office 2007, redesigned complete with a new file format. SQL Server 2005 has the newly named version of the same personal edition. SQL 2000, released 8 years ago, had the Personal Edition. There is also evidence that access is going the way of the dinosaur to give way to MS SQL on the desktop. You mean Macworld from about 60 days ago? As of today, there is no official Apple spreadsheet app, period. Serious document editing that you prepare for a business exchange needs Word, as it stands today.Įxcel = ‘numbers’ or whatever they are announcing at macworld ![]() Who uses Pages for word processing? TextEdit is fine for just jotting notes. And requires the clunky, non-default X.org to run.
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