By
Ina Fried
Friday, June 30 2006 09:42 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39371644,00.htm
Microsoft said that it is making another slight delay to the
planned arrival time for Office 2007, citing performance concerns with recent
test versions.
The software maker now plans to finish the code for the revamped Office suite
by the end of the year, rather than in October, the date it set in March. The company said in March that it would
wait to start selling Office until January, to coincide with the launch of
Windows Vista. Now, though, it says Office may not be ready for store shelves
until "early 2007."
"Based on internal testing and the beta 2 feedback around product
performance, we are revising our development schedule to deliver the 2007 system
release by the end of year 2006, with broad general availability in early 2007,"
a Microsoft representative said in an e-mail. "Feedback on quality and
performance will ultimately determine the exact dates."
It was not immediately clear how the Office delay would affect Microsoft's
Vista plans or a potential joint product launch. Many outsiders have already
said they expect the Windows update to also be delayed beyond January, but
Microsoft has yet to acknowledge a further delay.
"We are assessing the impact this timing change will have to our specific
launch plans," a Windows unit representative said, adding that Microsoft is
"still targeting January for general consumer availability."
Gartner analyst Michael Silver noted that the delay in Office could hit some
businesses hard, particularly those that signed volume license contracts in late
2003. Such Enterprise Agreement or Software Assurance contracts offer, among
other things, the right to any new versions of the product that come out over a
period of time, typically three years.
"Each month they miss is another group of customers that renewed EA or SA in
2003 that got no new version of Office for their payments," Silver said. "It was
just March when Microsoft emphatically stated that Office 2007 would be on the
October price list. Even at close range, they can't forecast this stuff."
Microsoft said that the final delivery of both Office and Vista will be
dependent on the code reaching certain quality levels. It said it expects to
release the first, near-final release candidate of Windows Vista in the third
quarter of this year.
Microsoft said earlier Thursday that it had nearly reached its self-imposed
limit for testers of the current Windows Vista beta, with plans to stop allowing
new downloads after Friday. In addition to the publicly available beta 2 version
of Office, Microsoft this week made
available a Web-based test version of the software.