If you’re having problems installing Office 2010 make sure to check out our article on how to fix problems upgrading Office 2010 beta to RTM (Final) release.Īlso, if you were using Office 2007 and are currently using the 2010 beta, we have a guide on how to switch back to Office 2007 after the 2010 beta ends. As I understand you have switched from Office 2003 to Office 2010 and want to know the differences. It gives you a chance to learn 2010 features, and still work in the familiar 2003 environment when you need to get things done quickly.
If you’re moving from Office 2003 to 2010, this allows you to install both versions side by side. Here is a shot of Word 20 running together on our XP machine. Now when you go into the Start menu under Microsoft Office, you’ll see both versions of the Office apps available. Installation is complete and you can close out of the installer. The amount of time it takes to install will vary between systems.
The installation begins and you’re shown the progress.
After you’ve made your selections click the Upgrade button. However, we want to run Word 20 on the same machine. Since we’re keeping Outlook 2003 and don’t want to use Outlook 2010, we’re making sure not to install Outlook 2010. Next, click the Installation Options tab and select Office programs you want to install. In this example we’re going to remove Excel and PowerPoint, and keep Outlook and Word 2003. Setup will detect Office 2003 and allow you to remove all applications, keep them, or select only the ones you want to keep.
Simply kick off the Office Professional Plus 2010 installation.
Or you can just install them through Windows Update. The Setup program removes these versions of Outlook even if you click to select the Keep these programs check box in the Removing Previous Versions dialog box.To run Office 2010 on your XP machine you have to make sure you have Service Pack 3 and Microsoft Silverlight installed (links below). Upon your second paragraph, it seems that youve tested.The classic view helps the people to smoothly upgrade to the latest version of Office, and work with Office 2007/2010/2013/2016 as if it were Office 2003 (and 2002, 2000). But when migrated to word 2010, after printscreen two. It brings back the classic menus and toolbars to Microsoft Office (includes Word) 2007, 2010, 2013, 2016, 2019 and 365. It is fine to use this featurein word 2003.
Suppose the if I copy or printscreen, the image will store into clipboard (max 24 items) for use. Im now meet an issue related to clipboard issue. When you install Outlook 2010, the Setup program removes Microsoft Office Outlook 2007, Microsoft Office Outlook 2003, and Microsoft Outlook 2002. Hi All, Im migrate office from 2003 to 2010. Microsoft Office Outlook 2010 cannot coexist with any earlier version of Microsoft Outlook. Information about how to use Office 2010 suites and programs on a computer that is running another version of Office įor a 2007 Microsoft Office version of this article, seeįor a Microsoft Office 2003 version of this article, seeįor a Microsoft Office XP version of this article, seeįor a Microsoft Office 2000 version of this article, see The same idea applies to Word’s startup and template folders. Create a similar sub folder and registry entries for Office 2010 i.e.Office14XLSTART and at HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Office\14.0\Common\Xlstart Set the value to match the sub new folder name e.g. HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Office\11.0\Common\Xlstart In the case of Excel I would relocate the contents of the (Excel 2003) XLSTART folder to a new sub folder of the existing XLSTART -The start-up folder location is stored in the registry at Office apps also work better also if their startup folders are not shared. To shared resources that are better not shared. Microsoft's recommendations are incomplete regarding Word - see It isn't completely successful, some common folders are still used, but it seems to help. I also do custom installations, specifying unique installation folders to further separate the installations. In my case I had Office 2003 and Office 2007, so I renamed them as follows:Īs well, I decided to keep both sets of ``Office Tools`, so I kept one folder and renamed the shortcuts using the same pattern, ie starting with the year. I created shortcuts to the 3 “2003 to 2007 Interactive Command References”. I created a single “Microsoft Office” folder and migrated all of the shortcuts into it.
So I navigated to the “Start” menu and edited folder and shortcut names to be more concise. I decided to consolidate things somewhat. MS tends to put everything in separate folders and with long wordy names.