Published: June 01, 2010
OfficeConverter 2010 Makes Microsoft Office 2010 Upgrades Fast, Safe and Painless
NASHUA, N.H., June 1 /PRNewswire/ -- With thousands of organizations expected to upgrade to Microsoft's new Office 2010 productivity suite in the coming months, ConverterTechnology today unveiled a new version of its OfficeConverter software that aims to make the migration fast, safe and as pain-free as possible.
OfficeConverter 2010 accelerates the process of converting existing files and custom Access applications to work with the new Microsoft Office platform by automating the most labor-intensive file migration functions. OfficeConverter 2010 is designed to eliminate the threats to business continuity for unprepared companies, including long-term downtime, reduced worker productivity and potential regulatory compliance liabilities, as well as cost savings by speeding up user adoption.
"Office 2010 is Microsoft's best version yet, but if companies don't plan their deployments correctly, file links will break, macros will go haywire, spreadsheet formulas will stop working, and revenue opportunities will be lost, to cite just a few potential problems," said Chip Bates, senior director of product development, ConverterTechnology.
The OfficeConverter 2010 suite provides file discovery and transformation tools that identify and fix problematic Access, Word, Excel and PowerPoint files, as well as any associated links, macros and Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) customizations during enterprise-wide Office 2010 migrations. The tools identify all of the files that should be converted, flag files at risk of corruption or incompatibility, and fix problems automatically to ensure the migration goes as smoothly as possible.
The company also provides process templates, methodologies and best practices that guide organizations through the deployment based on its experience in helping more than one million users identify, analyze and fix file conversion errors before they occur.
The result: OfficeConverter 2010 accomplishes Office file migration tasks at a fraction of the financial and resource costs of hiring outsourced code specialists or re-directing internal staff from core IT functions.
While Office 2010 has great new features that can offer companies significant productivity gains, it also poses a number of potential pitfalls during deployments. These include:
-- 64-bit architecture -- Microsoft now offers a new 64-bit version of
Office for power users who work large data sets and complex
computational problems. Migrating legacy 32-bit Excel spreadsheets and
other files to 64-bit environments can cause problems.
-- File extensions -- Office 2010 continues the longer file name extension
changes that began with Office 2007, such as MS Word's ".docx" extension
for the Open XML Standard, or the five-character extensions for MS
Access files (e.g. "accdb"). Links to files using earlier generation
extensions will cease to work due to these changes.
-- VBA compatibility -- Files used with custom applications can have a high
concentration of potentially critical VBA code errors. Changes in the
Office 2010 VBA code can cause programs and macros to crash.
-- Excel cell addresses -- Office 2010 expands the number of rows and
columns supported in an Excel worksheet. Custom worksheet calculations
that used valid name range equations in previous versions of Excel may
no longer work. That function has been replaced with a new "cell
address" function. And the change just doesn't impact Excel worksheets,
but potentially any file or application that references a name range in
VBA code.
-- New security model -- An MS Access security model implemented in Office
2007 and continued in Office 2010 no longer supports workgroup security.
Companies will have to employ a new security model such as
ActiveDirectory to fix the problem.
-- Compatibility mode -- Office 2010 offers a backwards compatibility mode
to offset compatibility issues with earlier Office versions. It ensures
that files created in Office 2010 can be converted back to a form usable
by users of previous versions. But running in compatibility mode will
also preserve any existing VBA code problems.
-- Microsoft Application Virtualization (App-V) and Microsoft Office Live
-- App-V and Office Live are other methods to deploy Office 2010 using
virtualization and cloud-based services. Virtualization and cloud
computing transforms applications into virtualized, network-available
services that are not installed on the users' computer. Instead,
applications can be automatically delivered to the users' computer as
users need them. This deployment method can pose significant file
linkage problems, incompatibility with VBA code, and display issues with
fonts and colors.
ConverterTechnology's suite of products includes the following applications -- DiscoverIT, OfficeConverter, ReportIT and SubmitIT -- that help companies begin capitalizing on the benefits of Office 2010 quickly, efficiently and with a minimum of risk.
-- DiscoverIT -- identifies all files on the network so IT staff can
determine which files need to be converted, as well as which files may
contain ActiveX controls;
-- OfficeConverter -- marks known compatibility issues such as invalid VBA
references and fixes 90+ percent of compatibility issues, increasing IT
staff productivity by minimizing hands-on development effort to fix
problems.
-- ReportIT -- generates detailed reports IT managers can use to make smart
decisions about which files to convert, how and when; and
-- SubmitIT -- enables individual desktop/laptop users to select and submit
files or applications for remediation, notifies help desk of the upload,
and automatically retrieves fixed files.
OfficeConverter 2010 will be available later this month.
About ConverterTechnology
ConverterTechnology provides software and services to help enterprises capitalize on the benefits of the latest versions of Microsoft Office without the migration risks of data corruption, reduced employee productivity and critical business application downtime. Founded in 1997, ConverterTechnology has helped more than one million users identify, analyze and fix compatibility errors before they occur, accelerating time to deployment. ConverterTechnology is headquartered in Nashua, N.H., with offices in Europe and Australia, and is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Powerlan Limited. For more information, visit www.convertertechnology.com.
SOURCE ConverterTechnology
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