G
Guest
Hi everyone
I'm aware that there have been several versions of Word within the Office
suite and each builds on the functionality of the previous one. I guess that
there will be a further version coming to supersede Word 2003. What's the
mechanism of "ordinary" users (rather than professionals or MVPs) coming to
know the new or updated functions? I know that folks can check out
newsgroups or ask questions, but someone *must* know the new functionality at
the outset. I can't see anyone reading a manual from beginning to end, nor
can I see anyone pressing each of the menus/toolbars in various combinations,
almost at random, to see what's new.
I suppose the ideal situation is for MS to publish a (relatively) short
document stating what's new or updated from the immediate predecessor. Does
that happen? Is it one large document which covers Office or are there
separate documents which cover Word, Excel etc. separately?
Thank you.
I'm aware that there have been several versions of Word within the Office
suite and each builds on the functionality of the previous one. I guess that
there will be a further version coming to supersede Word 2003. What's the
mechanism of "ordinary" users (rather than professionals or MVPs) coming to
know the new or updated functions? I know that folks can check out
newsgroups or ask questions, but someone *must* know the new functionality at
the outset. I can't see anyone reading a manual from beginning to end, nor
can I see anyone pressing each of the menus/toolbars in various combinations,
almost at random, to see what's new.
I suppose the ideal situation is for MS to publish a (relatively) short
document stating what's new or updated from the immediate predecessor. Does
that happen? Is it one large document which covers Office or are there
separate documents which cover Word, Excel etc. separately?
Thank you.