Windows 7 and Windows Strata may be the stars of Microsoft's Professional Developer Conference next week, but the next version of Office has also landed a role in the production.
Office 14, as the product is code-named, will be discussed at next week's event, with attendees likely to get a peek at a couple of its features, according to sources. Unlike Windows 7, though, folks shouldn't expect to leave Los Angeles with a copy of their own.
In particular, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer has talked recently about the idea that the next version of Office will be able to run in various modes, including over the internet.
"We will rewrite Office to work in a browser," he said in an interview with Britain's Computer Weekly.
Microsoft employees also got a peek at Office 14's versatility during the company's recent annual employee meeting.
A job opening for the "Office Web Companions team" offers a bit more on what was shown.
"Featured at the 2008 Company Meeting, the web companions organisation is at the center of Office's software plus services transformation, coordinating this key vision area for Office '14'," Microsoft said in a job listing for a lead software development engineer.
"Working together with partners across Office and beyond, we are tasked with delivering best-in-class Office web Applications that expand the reach of the traditional client apps in a wide variety of innovative ways, delivering server, service, and browser client features."
It's not clear how deep the Office 14 discussion will be at PDC. Only two sessions are currently listed with the Office tag, and neither sounds particularly likely to cover new ground.
One is on Office business applications, and the other deals with the software's Open XML file formats. A Microsoft representative declined to offer details on Office 14 or what the company plans to show at PDC.











I just love the idea that M$ has to rush to market a version of its Office product in an attempt to stay competitive with OpenOffice (www.openoffice.org). The ISO selected Open Office's format (open document) as the worldwide standard, and of course that meant M$ had to be able to support that format, in order to prevent being kicked out at the highest levels (UN, EU, governments generally etc)... and indeed at any level of people who like standards.
Of course it will take a few version releases for M$ open document format to become truly inter-changeable with DOC, so expect little nuances, like Powerpoint slides shifting text around etc for a year or so.
The bigger question as part of the KRudd 'education revolution' is when will our schools be teaching kids on open standards, rather than proprietary platforms'... seems like a lot of 'working families' will learn too late that their kids have been sold into proprietary slavery.