Unsexy but important: Office 2008 for Mac on January 15th

by Kris_Tuttle on January 4, 2008

All eyes will be on Steve Jobs at Mac­World where he’s expected to announce a Mac­Book Slim, new music and video offer­ings and who knows what else.

Prob­a­bly lost in the shuf­fle will be the Microsoft release of Office 2008 for Mac on the same day.  For those who don’t know Mac OS is cur­rently restricted to Office 2004 which is a major prob­lem for busi­ness users because many impor­tant Excel fea­tures only work on Office 2007 or later ver­sions.   We still have to test the fea­tures but expect them to work and pos­si­bly reduce the need to have Win­dows com­put­ers in the shop for cer­tain applications.

Walt Moss­berg over at the WSJ recently gave Office 2008 for Mac OS a pretty good review and notes that it’s a solid update for a user pop­u­la­tion that is badly in need of one.

Why is this important?

1. This helps Apple more in non-Apple envi­ron­ments.  Although Office 2008 on the Mac won’t sup­port key enter­prise soft­ware like Out­look, it becomes a more capa­ble com­put­ing cit­i­zen in cor­po­rate environments.

2. Pro­vides an impor­tant source of appli­ca­tion rev­enue for Microsoft on the Mac.  It’s prob­a­bly on a few hun­dred mil­lion dol­lars of oppor­tu­nity but it’s cer­tainly an incre­men­tal positive.

Longer term the ques­tion still remains as to how aggres­sive Microsoft might get with an “embrace and extend” strat­egy vis a vis Mac OS.  It may make more sense because as Microsoft grows their server side soft­ware busi­ness and holds on to Office lead­er­ship, it might be finan­cially attrac­tive to inte­grate Mac OS clients.

All in all we see the Office 2008 release for Mac as a fairly pos­i­tive event for both Apple and Microsoft.   We con­tinue to rec­om­mend Microsoft strongly due to low val­u­a­tion and improv­ing fundamentals.

Research 2.0 has a  long posi­tion in MSFT.

– Kris Tuttle

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