[access-uk] Re: Office 2007

  • From: "Dj Paddy" <mygroups@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Sat, 29 Sep 2007 13:37:15 +0100

Douglas,

If you can put yourself in the position I believe the best place to be is use your legacy machine, eg with your fave version of office/windows to do everyday tasks and teach yourself how to use the newer stuff.

IE. Dont' use the new stuff for mission critical tasks because you'll get frustrated and it's not good for the blood pressure!

Dj paddy
----- Original Message ----- From: "Douglas Harrison" <harrison1d@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sunday, September 23, 2007 8:48 PM
Subject: [access-uk] Re: Office 2007


thanks Léonie, that is the impression I had reached from reading various
articles on the web. I hesitated whether to insist on Office XP, but thought
that if Microsoft are going down this route I would have to face up to it
ultimately. I wonder now whether I should have waited until I had mastered
Vista first.

I have been looking for any Tutorials or demos but have had no luck so far. Having no useful sight now i suspect that it will be difficult to grasp the new
layout - automatically visualising menu bars and tool bars running
horizontally across the screen.

It all seems very strange that third party software developers have been
encouraged to adopt the Microsoft model and now they are dropping it
themselves  Progress??.


Douglas
S



On 23 Sep 2007 at 20:26, Léonie Watson wrote:

Doug,

 Jaws 8 works perfectly well with Office 2007. The problem isn't one
of accessibility, it's one of usability though.

 Office 2007 has changed completely. Menus go sideways instead of
down, all the functions have moved to different places, few of the old
shortcut keys still do the same job. In short, it's a tremendously steep
new learning curve.

 The worst of it is, that there doesn't seemto be any logical
thinking behind the change in interface. Microsoft will have you believe
it's good usability, but there's more than a little room for doubt on that particular score. In time, we'll all get used to it, but there's something
faintly irritating about having to look in the help files each time you
want to carry out the most mundane of word processing task.


Regards,


--

Douglas Harrison

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