Does Outlook in Office 2016 support Exchange 2007
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Definitely not officially.
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Office 2013 FPP ordered.
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I'm pretty sure O365 offers downgrade use.
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@Dashrender I believe you can use the previous version for a year after the new version has come out with O365
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@Dashrender said:
I'm pretty sure O365 offers downgrade use.
No it most certainly does not. Delayed upgrade maybe as @brianlittlejohn says. I never checked that.
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Same sight existing user just called me complaining that the outlook 2007 client keeps locking up and crashing.
Said user is #3 in this list.
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@JaredBusch said:
@Dashrender said:
I'm pretty sure O365 offers downgrade use.
No it most certainly does not. Delayed upgrade maybe as @brianlittlejohn says. I never checked that.
This MS page seems to indicate that you can roll back to Office 2013.
https://support.office.com/en-us/article/How-do-I-reinstall-Office-2013-after-an-Office-2016-upgrade-a6ca92f4-cbb4-4609-9fdb-f8d3dd6812f3 -
@Dashrender said:
@JaredBusch said:
@Dashrender said:
I'm pretty sure O365 offers downgrade use.
No it most certainly does not. Delayed upgrade maybe as @brianlittlejohn says. I never checked that.
This MS page seems to indicate that you can roll back to Office 2013.
https://support.office.com/en-us/article/How-do-I-reinstall-Office-2013-after-an-Office-2016-upgrade-a6ca92f4-cbb4-4609-9fdb-f8d3dd6812f3That is not downgrade rights. It clearly states that a subscription gives you the option to install either version. Notably it states that a valid reason is Exchange 2007, because they know there are tons of them out there.
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@JaredBusch said:
@Dashrender said:
@JaredBusch said:
@Dashrender said:
I'm pretty sure O365 offers downgrade use.
No it most certainly does not. Delayed upgrade maybe as @brianlittlejohn says. I never checked that.
This MS page seems to indicate that you can roll back to Office 2013.
https://support.office.com/en-us/article/How-do-I-reinstall-Office-2013-after-an-Office-2016-upgrade-a6ca92f4-cbb4-4609-9fdb-f8d3dd6812f3That is not downgrade rights. It clearly states that a subscription gives you the option to install either version. Notably it states that a valid reason is Exchange 2007, because they know there are tons of them out there.
Are you pulling a word smith thing on me? If your goal wasn't to be allowed to use an older version, what was it?
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@Dashrender said:.
Are you pulling a word smith thing on me? If your goal wasn't to be allowed to use an older version, what was it?
No, the article is only talking about the technical fix, it does not deal with the legal aspect of licensing it. There are no downgrade rights even with the Enterprise plans (though MS will usually just give you a key under your EA if you have an issue).
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@Dashrender said:
@JaredBusch said:
@Dashrender said:
@JaredBusch said:
@Dashrender said:
I'm pretty sure O365 offers downgrade use.
No it most certainly does not. Delayed upgrade maybe as @brianlittlejohn says. I never checked that.
This MS page seems to indicate that you can roll back to Office 2013.
https://support.office.com/en-us/article/How-do-I-reinstall-Office-2013-after-an-Office-2016-upgrade-a6ca92f4-cbb4-4609-9fdb-f8d3dd6812f3That is not downgrade rights. It clearly states that a subscription gives you the option to install either version. Notably it states that a valid reason is Exchange 2007, because they know there are tons of them out there.
Are you pulling a word smith thing on me? If your goal wasn't to be allowed to use an older version, what was it?
Not intentionally. To me, downgrade rights are a permanent right to have a specific version installed forever. With Office 365, there are no permanent rights to anything. It is all based on the subscription, and what that subscription allows at the moment.
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@JaredBusch said:
Same sight existing user just called me complaining that the outlook 2007 client keeps locking up and crashing.
Said user is #3 in this list.
Just be thankful it isn't a PST file. (If it could even grow that large, which it can't.)