PowerPoint viewer 2007 in Windows 7

  • Thread starter Thread starter Noor Motani
  • Start date Start date
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Noor Motani

I purchased new laptop with windows 7 home premium. Since it does not have
office 2007, I downloaded PowerPoint viewer 2007. It did open the .pps
attachments but after a couple of days it refused as a dll file got missing.
I uninstalled and re installed the viewer and it worked. I have now realized
that when windows updates, it removes this dll file.

Any help is appreciated.
 
From: "Noor Motani" <[email protected]>

| I purchased new laptop with windows 7 home premium. Since it does not have
| office 2007, I downloaded PowerPoint viewer 2007. It did open the .pps
| attachments but after a couple of days it refused as a dll file got missing.
| I uninstalled and re installed the viewer and it worked. I have now realized
| that when windows updates, it removes this dll file.

| Any help is appreciated.

What is this unidentified DLL ?
 
I purchased new laptop with windows 7 home premium. Since it does not
have office 2007, I downloaded PowerPoint viewer 2007. It did open the
.pps attachments but after a couple of days it refused as a dll file got
missing. I uninstalled and re installed the viewer and it worked. I have
now realized that when windows updates, it removes this dll file.

Any help is appreciated.

Suggest you install OpenOffice.org - for free. It's a highly compatible
office suite. The 'presentation' portion will handle most powerpoint
files.
 
Don't listen to that dingbat ray.
Open Office will open many Office documents...but will ruin formatting
and other "incompatibilities".

I didn't say it was perfect. There will be some extremely complex
formatting that it won't quite make - but you'll still be able to deal
with it. For 'normal' operations, it will be quite sufficient.
If you're using Office just at home, get the Student edition...it's for
non-commercial use.
If your using it professionally, then it is worth the investment of full
blown Office.

I've yet, in my entire life, seen professional work done with Open
Office. OO is for kids.

No indication that the poster is doing 'professional work'. On the other
hand you haven't looked very far.

OpenOffice won't handle MS office macros - that's the biggest limitation.
IMHO the world would be a lot better off if macros were written for
OpenOffice instead of assuming everyone in the world is willing to pay a
few hundred bucks to deal with your 'valuable' information. At least
virtually everyone on the planet can have OpenOffice for the price of a
download. It runs on MS, MAC and Linux - MS office can't say the same.
 
From: "ray" <[email protected]>

| No indication that the poster is doing 'professional work'. On the other
| hand you haven't looked very far.

| OpenOffice won't handle MS office macros - that's the biggest limitation.
| IMHO the world would be a lot better off if macros were written for
| OpenOffice instead of assuming everyone in the world is willing to pay a
| few hundred bucks to deal with your 'valuable' information. At least
| virtually everyone on the planet can have OpenOffice for the price of a
| download. It runs on MS, MAC and Linux - MS office can't say the same.

+1
 
From: "Death" <[email protected]>




| +1 for someone whom uses a spreadsheet to create list of CD's owned.
| How clever.
| Yes, OO is great for that.

I use it all the time on my Latitude D620 notebook with Vista business.

I go can back and forth with MS Word and OO Writer with no problems on my monthly reports
in .DOC files.

It is a good option and best of all -- it is NOT from Microsoft.
 
the dll file missing or deleted by windows update is: MSVCR80.DLL. The error
message is "msvcr80.dll is missing. Reinstalling program might solve the
problem".

After uninstall and reinstall PowerPoint viewer, it works until windows
update is downloaded and installed.

I hope this information is sufficient.
 
From: "Noor Motani" <[email protected]>

| the dll file missing or deleted by windows update is: MSVCR80.DLL. The error
| message is "msvcr80.dll is missing. Reinstalling program might solve the
| problem".

| After uninstall and reinstall PowerPoint viewer, it works until windows
| update is downloaded and installed.

| I hope this information is sufficient.


| --
| Best Regards
| Noor Motani

| "David H. Lipman said:
From: "Noor Motani" <[email protected]>
| I purchased new laptop with windows 7 home premium. Since it does not
have
| office 2007, I downloaded PowerPoint viewer 2007. It did open the .pps
| attachments but after a couple of days it refused as a dll file got
missing.
| I uninstalled and re installed the viewer and it worked. I have now
realized
| that when windows updates, it removes this dll file.
| Any help is appreciated.
What is this unidentified DLL ?

 
From: "Noor Motani" <[email protected]>

| the dll file missing or deleted by windows update is: MSVCR80.DLL. The error
| message is "msvcr80.dll is missing. Reinstalling program might solve the
| problem".

| After uninstall and reinstall PowerPoint viewer, it works until windows
| update is downloaded and installed.

| I hope this information is sufficient.


OK 'msvcr80.dll' is from the Microsoft® C Runtime Library.

I have v8.0.50727.42 on my PC.

There are two possiblities. One is that the file is in %WINDIR% and the other is in the
%PROGRAMFILES% tree.

In a situation like this get a copy and place the file in %windir% and/or
%windir%\system32 this way the C Runtime Library can be found in the path.
 
Well. if redoing thousands of spreadsheets is worth a few hundred bucks
to you, by all means have at it.

Well, if that's your hobby, have at it. I prefer to just open and use
them, myself.
It's not my job to bolster your opinion with "open source is great,
free, and a royal PITA".

Since OpenOffice is free and simple to download/install, it makes eminent
sense to me to try it first. If it does not meet your needs, then fork
out hundreds of dollars.
Yeah, Office doesn't run on Linux.
I'm shocked.

Yeah - OpenOffice does a lot better on MS office files than vice versa. A
lot of software designed for Linux has been ported to MS.
 
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