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Microsoft offers software for Macs
SAN FRANCISCO (IDG) -- Microsoft rolled out new versions of Outlook Express and Internet Explorer for the Macintosh today, both of which include features not available in the current Windows versions of the products, Microsoft officials said at Macworld Expo here. The new applications -- Internet Explorer Version 4.5 and Outlook Express Version 4.5 -- are available immediately in eight languages: English, French, German, Swedish, Spanish, Italian, Dutch and Danish, Microsoft said.
Internet Explorer 4.5 for the Mac includes an "adjustable print preview" that allows users to print multiple Web pages to a single page, and to see how the Web page will appear before actually printing it. It also includes a "form autofill" feature that automatically enters common personal information into forms on the Web, such as name, age and telephone number, Microsoft said.
Neither of those features are available in current Windows versions of the product. In an appearance during the keynote given by Apple interim CEO Steve Jobs, Ben Waldman, general manager of Microsoft's Macintosh business unit, heralded the new products as the latest symbol of a "new spirit of cooperation" between the companies.
Microsoft will no longer offer Macintosh users "simply a port, a mere sub-set of a Windows application," Waldman said. The new Macintosh programs were built from the ground up for the Mac, he added. Macintosh users at the show were divided over the new, cozy relationship between the firms, which came about after Microsoft agreed to invest US$150 million [M] in Apple last year. When Waldman first appeared on stage he met with a decidedly lukewarm reception from the Apple crowd, with a few boos and murmurs of disapproval. When he excitedly announced the special version of Internet Explorer for the Mac, the news was met with a deafening silence. Users questioned after the keynote, however, were more pragmatic about the closer ties between the companies. "Microsoft is out there, they're not going away, so we may as well work together. Cross-platform compatibility needs to be embraced," said Daniel Kees, a print process engineer with CD-ROM maker Metatec in Fremont, California. "The sooner we finish this battle with Microsoft and work together the better," Kees added. Another Mac user said he had grown frustrated waiting for Microsoft to "play catch up" with Macintosh versions of Windows software applications, and welcomed the new cooperation. "It's important that Microsoft continues to develop products for the Macintosh because a lot of businesses have been standardizing on (Windows) software, but a lot of them still use Apple computers as well," said Don Carnahan, a business development worker in Renton, Washington. "I think the guy (Waldman) had a lot of nerve to stand up there in front of us -- I sort of admire him for it," said Carnahan. "Microsoft and Apple have to get along, that's what the industry needs." Rivalry between the companies stretches back almost to the start of the PC revolution, when Apple fans believe Microsoft stole Apple's idea for a user-friendly graphical interface and used it to help make Windows the industry giant it is today. Then last year Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates surprised the Apple clan, appearing on a huge screen at Macworld Expo to announce a $150 million [M] investment in the computer maker and plans for the firms to work together on joint product development. A year and a half later the alliance appears to be holding strong. Today, Jobs described Apple's relationship with Microsoft as being like a marriage. "It's terrific 99 percent of the time and about one percent we argue over stuff ... in life that's not a bad ratio," he said. New features in Internet Explorer 4.5 and Outlook Express 4.5, Macintosh Editions, that are not in the Windows versions of the products include the following:
The products are available today and can be downloaded, free of charge, at www.microsoft.com/mac/ie/. Microsoft is scheduled to launch the Japanese version of Internet Explorer and Outlook Express 4.5 next month. Microsoft also launched a new Web site, called Mactopia, an online resource for Mac users where they can find information about Microsoft products for the Macintosh and links to Macintosh community sites, Microsoft said. James Niccolai is senior correspondent for the IDG News Service in San Francisco. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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