- #Microsoft office 2010 end of life install#
- #Microsoft office 2010 end of life software#
- #Microsoft office 2010 end of life password#
- #Microsoft office 2010 end of life free#
> If you install Office 2016, it will install alongside Office 2013, it does not remove the old version.īest regards, Andre Da Costa Independent Advisor for Directlyįirst before answering your questions - Office 2019 is the current version and the only one available from Microsoft.
#Microsoft office 2010 end of life free#
If you want to cut cost, you should consider the free Office online since your needs are basic or the free open source Libre Office. Office 2016 while you can still get it, if you are gonna spend money to buy a suite, I would just buy the latest version Office 2019.Įven though Office 2019 is new, there is little to no learning curve, it looks pretty much like Office 2016. > Office 2013 is significantly old now and came out around 2012 and should be following Office 2010 when it comes to limited support.
My name is Andre Da Costa an Independent Consultant, Windows Insider MVP and Windows & Devices for IT MVP. Why am I suggesting posting this in a new thread? So that the subject is specific to the question/issue being encountered ensuring that the maximum number of people who may information about it will see it and respond accordingly. What I would suggest is posting a different question specific to the "hotlink" issues you were (are?) encountering and include information such asġ) does it apply to hotlinks in all messages or a select few from a specific set of senders?Ģ) Any 3rd party addins installed (if any)Ĥ) Is Office '2010 fully updated and if yes, did you try repairing Office? Short answer: Yes but would suggest uninstalling the older version first Re: #2 - Any newer version doing an in place install. Also, I don't advise anyone upgrading versions "in hopes of" fixing a problem
Might be at some point in the future but for now - wouldn't be my first choice. Re: #1 - Significant benefit for "limited home user". You can get older versions from 3rd party vendors BUT if the prices being charged "sound too good to be true - it's more then likely because they are".
#Microsoft office 2010 end of life software#
So I'm really not looking for any major new features / functions.and with 2019 software being so relatively new, I'm really only interested in considering 2013 or 2016 which should be stable.and my main questions are:ġ) Is there any significant benefit to a limited home user.to chose between 2013 or 2016?Ģ) Will both Office 2013 and Office 2016 simply install right over the top of the older existing installed Office 2010, and retain / migrate all my information right into the newer Office version?įirst before answering your questions - Office 2019 is the current version and the only one available from Microsoft. ( regardless if that will resolve the Email hotlink issue or not ). In fact, Office 2010 does really well for my needs, but a recent bout of trouble with hotlinks inside Outlook 2010 Emails got me thinking about possibly bumping up to a newer version. I'm a low usage home user of Office ing Outlook for daily Email.then simple Word documents a few times a week.and just a couple of very simple monthly tracking excel spreadsheets I pull up every day. Microsoft did not say when it would drop Basic Auth support, however.įor those who haven't yet dispensed with the old Outlook clients, Microsoft recommended - as it has confidently - that they switch to the subscription model of Office 365 or Microsoft 365, which provides always-up-to-date client software.Would appreciate any first hand experience / knowledge about the following:
#Microsoft office 2010 end of life password#
Microsoft explained that the older Outlook 2007 and Outlook 2010 clients will be incompatible with two upcoming changes to services, including an end to support for Basic Authentication - essentially, the long-standard username + password combination - that was postponed in February 2021.
1 deadline really will cut older Outlook clients from Microsoft's services. "We won't take any active measures to block other versions of the Office client, such as Office 2013, from connecting to Office 365 services, but these older clients may encounter performance or reliability issues over time," the developer said then. At the time, Microsoft had been surprisingly gracious, saying that while support would officially end, that didn't necessarily mean the end of connectivity.