From: "Anton Susanto" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

CM-ers !!!

apa yg dijanjikan microsoft experience telah terbukti sangat berhasil ! all
of us is going to experience more of it I guess =)

yg gue heran, kenapa orang spt David ini kaget dgn keberhasilan microsoft
membawa "all new xp-rience" (moto mereka ttg xp) ??? bukankah ini sebuah xp
yg baru sama sekali yg tdk pernah kita alami di versi2 sblmnya ?

anyway, ini ceritanya dari zd-net anchordesk :

***
Microsoft to me: We're turning off your Office

David Coursey, Executive Editor, AnchorDesk

A funny thing happened on the way to PC Expo: Microsoft killed my copy of
Office. Or at least that's what the error message said, threatening me with
something called "Reduced Functionality Mode" if I didn't immediately insert
my original Office disc and have my software reactivated.
"If you don't perform the reactivation steps, Microsoft Office will go into
Reduced Functionality Mode. In that mode you will not be able to save
modifications to documents, or create a new document, and additional
functionality may be reduced" said the "help" screen attached to the error
message. (The error itself could not be copied and pasted so I didn't save
the exact language; I must say I was a little stunned).

SO, HERE I AM, sitting in a jet at 34,000 feet someplace above
God-only-knows-where, using my computer and minding my own business when
Microsoft threatens to essentially shut down my copy of Office. And at the
very start of a week-long business trip, too.

Why did they do that? Here's what the help screen said: "Due to a
significant change in your computer configuration from when Microsoft Office
was installed and activated, some important information about your computer
needs to be restored, and the product needs to be reactivated to continue to
function properly."

Hmm, the threatening message popped up while I was writing a column in one
window and using Enfish OneSpace in another. I wonder if that had anything
to do with it? But I'd installed Enfish weeks ago; funny the message should
appear now. Or maybe it was the copy of Documents-to-Go I installed a few
hours ago so I could load Word documents onto a Palm device.

FRANKLY, I HAVE NO IDEA WHAT I DID, if anything, to change the configuration
of my computer. Nor should it be Microsoft's business if I did. As it
stands, I am on an airplane, my original Office disk is 6 miles below and
2,200 miles behind me, and Microsoft has just told me that Office will die
if I don't immediately reauthorize my copy.

What a way to start a business trip! As soon as I land, I will drop an
e-mail to people I know in the Office group at Microsoft in Redmond and see
what they have to say about this. I am sure they have some, to them, logical
reason why this happened. Something I did that changed the configuration of
my computer.

And it's not like they made good on the threat. I've rebooted and Office
still seems to be working. But that's not the point. What I am wondering is
this: Why would such a screen ever appear on the screen of someone using a
legal copy of Microsoft Office?

We'll see what Microsoft has to say.
***

gimana yah orang model gue yg tukang gonta-ganti modem, VGA, Proc, mobo
bahkan HDD ? =)

*spyder*

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