I have a office 3765 home subscribsion.  I wonder if I would be affected by
this since I use the outlook 2016 email client as part of my office
subscribtion.  Hmmm.

Matthew



-----Original Message-----
From: JAWS-Users-List [mailto:jaws-users-list-boun...@jaws-users.com] On
Behalf Of Jim Flusche
Sent: Wednesday, April 26, 2017 5:08 PM
To: jaws-users-list@jaws-users.com
Subject: [JAWS-Users] Microsoft Planning to End Support for Standalone
Versions of Office by 2020

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Microsoft Planning to End Support for Standalone Versions of Office by 2020
banner end Andre Da Costa
| April 26, 2017 in
How-To

The future of Microsoft Office is
subscriptions.
That sums up what the company confirmed recently in a blog post notifying
users about its plans to wind down support for standalone versions  of
Office aka perpetual licenses; which want to connect to its Office 365 cloud
services. That means versions such as Office 2010, 2013 and 2016 will no
longer be able to access O365 cloud services such as Exchange Online,
Sharepoint Online, OneDrive for Business or Skype for Business by October
2020.

The company is not ending development of perpetual versions of the suite,
but users will need to move to the latest versions in order to access all of
Microsoft's O365 Cloud services. For example, Office 2016 which was launched
in September 2015 will have its mainstream support end in 2020. So, if you
don't cut over to a Microsoft Office subscription by then, it will no longer
be supported to connect to Microsoft's cloud services.

Microsoft Winding Down Support for Perpetual Versions of Office

One of the key benefits of Office 365 versus Office 2016 is the ongoing
delivery of new features and functionality. Office 2016 Professional Plus
has pretty much stood still since its 2015 release, receiving only security
updates. Office 365, on the other hand, has received numerous improvements
and features such as improved collaboration, business intelligence
enhancements in Excel and Motion Path in PowerPoint. For many users, the
standalone suite remains attractive, especially for organizations that need
control over access to features in the suite. Here is what Microsoft's Ron
Markezich had to say about the changes ahead.

block quote
When customers connect to Office 365 with a legacy version of Office,
they're not enjoying all that the service has to offer. The IT
benefits-particularly security-are cut short. And the end user experience in
the apps is limited to the features shipped at a point in time. To ensure
that customers are getting the most out of their Office 365 subscription, we
are updating our system requirements.

list of 3 items
* Office 365 ProPlus or Office perpetual in mainstream support required to
connect to Office 365 services. Starting October 13, 2020, Office 365
ProPlus or Office perpetual in mainstream support will be required to
connect to Office 365 services. Office 365 ProPlus will deliver the best
experience, but for customers who aren't ready to move to the cloud by 2020,
we will also support connections from Office perpetual in mainstream
support.
* Applies to Office 365 commercial services only. This update does not
change our system requirements or support policies for the Office perpetual
clients, Office perpetual clients connecting to on-premises servers, or any
consumer services.
* More than three years' notice. We're providing more than three years'
notice to give IT time to plan and budget for this change. Until this new
requirement goes into effect in 2020, Office 2010, Office 2013 and Office
2016 perpetual clients will still be able to connect to Office 365 services.
Source
list end
block quote end

Office 365 repair 9
Save

Users can read further details about the changes at the company's Tech
Community website.
Microsoft is slowly nudging users to move to Office 365, which actually
offers greater value in the long run by being cheaper up front, plus it's
continually updated with new features and flexible deployment options. Three
years is ample notice, especially for versions such as Office 2010, which
would have been expected to stop receiving support by 2020.

The dream of Office as a service goes back as far as Office 2003 when
Microsoft had originally planned to offer its suite as a subscription, but
the market wasn't ready. Office 365, first launched in 2011 has evolved over
the years to become a consistent revenue generator for the software firm.
The rest of the industry has followed suit, brands such as AutoDesk, Adobe,
and Intuit have also moved their business models to subscriptions.

>From your humble pinhead!
Owner of the Windows 10 and Jaws group.

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