From: James0007 on 5 Mar 2010 15:14 "Bob I" wrote: > One Note isn't part of Office 2007 Standard Edition. If you want to use > One Note in a business environment you would need a retail version or > upgrade to a Version of Office 2007 that contains it. > Okay, let me see if I understand this correctly ... I paid $159 for Home & Student plus another $289 for Office Standard; for a pre-tax total of $448 -- which is roughly $50 more than if I had just bought Office Standard in the first place (or, alternatively, just bought Office Small Business at the non-upgrade full price). And now Microsoft wants ANOTHER $79.95 (U.S.) from me to legally use OneNote in a business environment? Uh, I don't think so. I'm a 100%-no apologies-capitalist kind of guy, but that's ridiculous. Why not give the buyer credit for that extra $50 and allow him/her to just pay the difference of $30 to bring it up to $79.95? Yes, the software is good and yes, you get what you pay for. But you shouldn't have to pay MORE than you would have if you'd bought the same quantity and type of software components in a different "arrangement". This is the kind of pricing structure that makes people say negative things about Microsoft. (Guess I just did, huh?) As it stands, I'm just going to uninstall OneNote and go back to the free utilities I'd been using previously to do the same type of work. Microsoft, I'm disappointed. James P.S. - And another thing ... what's the reasoning behind putting OneNote in both the cheapest and the most expensive Office suites, and nothing in between??
From: Bob I on 9 Mar 2010 09:04 First you aren't talking to Microsoft here, this is just public newsgroup that Microsoft hosts for users to discuss problems and solutions. We are just Office users here. Second, apparently you seem to believe if you spend money and buy things that you don't need that someone else is responsible to sort out what your needs were after the fact? I merely stated what it says on the licensing. Why did you buy Home and Student in the first place? As an example, try telling Toyota that you want them to refund the price difference between a Prius that you bought and the Tundra pickup you really need. James0007 wrote: > "Bob I" wrote: > > >>One Note isn't part of Office 2007 Standard Edition. If you want to use >>One Note in a business environment you would need a retail version or >>upgrade to a Version of Office 2007 that contains it. >> > > > Okay, let me see if I understand this correctly ... > > I paid $159 for Home & Student plus another $289 for Office Standard; for a > pre-tax total of $448 -- which is roughly $50 more than if I had just bought > Office Standard in the first place (or, alternatively, just bought Office > Small Business at the non-upgrade full price). > > And now Microsoft wants ANOTHER $79.95 (U.S.) from me to legally use OneNote > in a business environment? Uh, I don't think so. I'm a 100%-no > apologies-capitalist kind of guy, but that's ridiculous. > > Why not give the buyer credit for that extra $50 and allow him/her to just > pay the difference of $30 to bring it up to $79.95? > > Yes, the software is good and yes, you get what you pay for. But you > shouldn't have to pay MORE than you would have if you'd bought the same > quantity and type of software components in a different "arrangement". > > This is the kind of pricing structure that makes people say negative things > about Microsoft. (Guess I just did, huh?) > > As it stands, I'm just going to uninstall OneNote and go back to the free > utilities I'd been using previously to do the same type of work. > > Microsoft, I'm disappointed. > > James > P.S. - And another thing ... what's the reasoning behind putting OneNote in > both the cheapest and the most expensive Office suites, and nothing in > between??
|
Pages: 1 Prev: allow comments extraction from MSWord in selection-comment pairs Next: Multiple Errors |