Anyone have an idea of Excel use among versions?

  • Thread starter Thread starter David J. Braden
  • Start date Start date
D

David J. Braden

Hi -
I have not yet found this on the web, wonder if someone else might have
some insight. I am particularly interested in the percentages (better
yet, numbers) of end-users who "almost always" (or only) use version
2003 versus those who "almost always" (or only) use 2007 (or later).
This tends to exclude folks like Rob Bovey and Chip Pearson, who likely
use everything back to Excel 5. E.g., is 70% Excel 2003, 30% Excel 2007
a reasonable guess?

Informed guesstimates are very much welcomed.

TIA - Dave B
 
Simon - Interesting idea, but statistically meaningless, much less
difficult to implement, if you mean mining posts for stated versions of
Excel. Certainly there will be more posts, relatively speaking, from
those switching from 2003 to later versions. I am not interested as
interested in those posting to the sites you mentioned as I am in
overall installed base: that's what I meant to convey by "end-users".
Sorry for the confusion, and thank you for your suggestion.

Dave B (ex-MVP, Excel (and Mac), heavy emphasis on stats, algorithms &
problem-identification with core Excel)
 
And you might even get a different split between "what do you use at home/for
personal use" and what do you use at your office. Many large organizations
have forced the change-over to 2007, while the budgets at home don't
necessarily permit upgrading everytime a new version hits the streets. Same
for small businesses - their budgets generally don't permit upgrading every
30 days.

Me? Yeah, I've got virtual machines with 2000, XP, and 2007 on them, but my
primary tool both at home and at work is 2003. In truth, probably 98% of all
that I do, and even what my (few) clients do, could still be done with '97!
 
Simon,
The essence of your response is:
"http://www.thecodecage.com/forumz/members/list/ clearly [shows]
who is using what version of the MS application, so its [sic] not post
driven but member driven"

This is statistically of little to no value for what I seek (not to say
it is of no value to forum members!!). I'm looking for an estimate of
percentage of latter versions in use, ideally (to JLatham's observation)
weighted by time spent on the version.

JLatham's observation is that major corporations are moving to Excel
2007; in my area (Monterey Bay), no major computer-intensive employer I
know of has done so, and the two most popular trainers I know of have no
demand for training in Excel 2007. Still, that's /here/; the case may
well be very different in other locales.

Anyway, thanks for taking a stab at this.
Regards,
Dave B
 
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