Installing Office 2004 For Mac

2020. 1. 31. 03:36카테고리 없음

Installing Office 2004 For Mac

If you are installing Office 2004 AFTER you have installed Office 2008 be aware that you should install 2004 first. Entourage 2008 moves fonts to a different.

Installing Office 2004 For Mac Free

Contents. Microsoft Office X Microsoft Office X for Mac can open Office 2007 (including docx) files by installing a converter and the latest Office for Mac Updates:. Download and install Microsoft's Converter:. Download and install Microsoft's latest update:.

After installing both the converter and the latest update, restart your computer. You can now double-click on Office 2007 file and it will open in the appropriate program without any problems. Microsoft Office 2004 Microsoft Office 2004 for Mac can open Office 2007 (including docx) files by installing a converter and the latest Office for Mac Updates:.

Download and install Microsoft's Converter:. Download and install Microsoft's latest update:. After installing both the converter and the latest update, restart your computer. You can now double-click on any Office 2007 file and it will open in the appropriate program without any problems.

Microsoft Office 2008 Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac can open Office 2007 (including docx) fileswithout problems. The Helpdesk can install Office 2008 by request only. How do I find out what version of Office I have?.

Open Microsoft Word. Click on the menu titled 'Word' (located in the top left corner, next to the Apple Logo). Click on 'About Word'. In the window that appears you will see the text 'Microsoft Word.' Followed by the version ('X' or '2004' or '2008') What are Office 2007 files? Office 2007 introduced a new file format that earlier versions of Microsoft Office cannot open, unless certain converters and updates are installed.

Office 2004 For Mac Download

Office 2007 files include docx, docm, xlsx, xlsm, pptx, and pptm files.

Microsoft Office 2004 for Mac OS was written for Mac OS X as far as I remember. The Classic Environment you get asked for is for applications written prior to Mac OS X, namely Mac OS 8 or 9. Mac OS X has been with us for a decade, thus I wonder, where you did get such old software. Are you sure, that you have the correct MS Office CD? Btw, since Apple has used Intel CPUs (2006), the Classic Environment is no longer supported on Intel Macs and especially since Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard.

Can you maybe post a picture of the installation CD or post more details? Also have a look at the following links to learn more about Mac OS X.

Office

Click to expand. Yep, but for PowerPC Macs. On Intel machines, it runs through Rosetta which is an optional install on Snow Leopard. It's been a while since I installed Office 2004, I don't recall an 'application assistant', thought it was drag and drop install. Anyway, installing Rosetta. Running a PowerPC app should bring up a prompt box to download and install it from Apple, or you can try installing it from the Snow Leopard DVD by opening the Optional Installs folder, opening Optional Installs.mpkg and then following the instructions. Then try installing Office 2004 again, see if that works.

Installing Office 2004 For Mac

Click to expand.As you might know, Apple used IPM CPUs using the PowerPC architecture until 2006, the year Apple released the first Intel Macs using the x86 architecture. Universal Binaries (UB) were introduced, meaning if applications are written as UB, they could run on PPC and x86 Macs without further translation layers.

But as many applications were still using PPC code, they had to be translated to run on x86 Macs, thus Rosetta (like the stone) was introduced, which allows running PPC code on x86 Macs. The performance is lowered though, as there is one additional layer between application and CPU, but the Intel CPUs made up for that. As MS Office was written before 2005/6, it was still using PPC code, the MS Office 2008 version was the first UB version of it. Rosetta is invisible in that way, that it is not an application stored inside Applications or Utilities, but you can see, that an application is using Rosetta via Activity Monitor and the KIND column, where it says PowerPC for PPC applications.

Installing Office 2004 For Mac

The OP though has a different problem (maybe), as the MS Office 2004 installation asks for the Classic Environment, which was abandoned with the advent of x86 Macs and completely removed from Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard. The Classic Environment allowed to run Mac OS 9.2.2 on PPC Macs coming with Mac OS X 10.0 to 10.4.

Installing Office 2004 For Mac