GCN Home > 04/28/03 issue
Office 2003 is XML-friendly
By Carlos A. Soto, GCN Staff
With Office 2003, Microsoft Corp. finally gets it: Workers value ease of use and Internet-friendliness more than fancy bells and whistles.

Unlike its earlier suites, in which Office applications differed slightly from app to app, Microsoft deliberately has given the new Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook and Access an identical look for easier switching among programs.

The GCN Lab recently tried out the first and second beta versions of the suite, which Microsoft plans to release this summer.

Outlookthe program that has changed the mostpresents data by level of importance. The interface has four panes of varying size.

The largest pane displays an e-mail message in a letter-size frame to the right. Users can edit and save it as a Word document, which is similar to the way Office 2002 already functions. Also, e-mail messages are spaced and indented like business letters, which makes them easier to read and process.

The chronologically arranged in-box, in the middle pane, can display messages by various attributes. At the left, other windows aid in navigating the hard drive and Outlook folders, as well as archiving materials.

The Search Folders feature organizes and categorizes e-mail for fast access or archiving. A default Follow-up Folder works in combination with a feature called Quick Flagging to move important messages aside so that unwanted ones can be block-deleted without accidentally killing important others.

Data sharing

Office 2003 also has more compatibility with SharePoint Team Services, in anticipation of increased project collaboration. For example, users can now share each others calendars, and multiple calendars can remain open simultaneously.

The most notable difference in the new suites versions of Excel and Access is Extensible Markup Language compatibility. Users can make what Microsoft calls workbook models to swap data to and from XML data sources. Excel 2003 can export to or receive XML data from user-specified databases or schemas.

Access 2002 placed strict limits on altering XML data when importing or exporting; files had to follow Microsofts schema. But Microsoft has made these operations less finicky in Access 2003. Users can customize Extensible Stylesheet Language files when importing or exporting data.
