Yes however now it has expired so you have to by the full version
Since Office 2010 is still in Beta, Microsoft has not released a viewer for PowerPoint 2010 yet. However, you should be able to view with the PoserPoint 2007 viewer. See related links for free download.
No, Microsoft Office 2003 is definitly not free.
Yes it is unless you can get the CD of a friend
No, Microsoft 2010 is not free it can run you $150 dollars - $500 dollarsMicrosoft Office Home and Student - $150 (Including Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote)Microsoft Office Home and Business - $280 (Including Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook and OneNoteMicrosoft Office Professional - $500 (Including Word, Excel, PowerPoint,
The installer will not allow this. You must install Service Pack 3. Service Pack 3 is free, makes your computer more secure, fixes bugs, and will be required by most newer software. If you were able to download the Microsoft Office 2010 beta, you can download the service pack just as easily.
You can purshase Microsoft Office 2010 for about $200.00, use starter Microsoft Office, which contains Microsoft Word and Excel, or download a free software such as OpenOffice at Openoffice.org (recommended).
No.
Most laptops do not have Microsoft Office pre-installed on them. Some do, however, come with offer a free 90 day trial of Office, which can be purchased at a discount later.
The current version is Microsoft Office 2007, which is not available for free download. You can purchase and upgrade version of 2007 which is moderately inexpensive compared to the full non-upgrade version of Office. You can also pay and download from Microsoft, Office 2007 Lastly, the public beta for Office 2010 is also available for free download as long as you have a valid hotmail of live.com email address.
The program Microsoft Office 2007 is not free to download for Microsoft customers. You will have to pay the upgrade fee after the provided trial period.
If you download Microsoft Office 2003 for free, chances are it will be a trial. You will have to pay to download any version of Microsoft Office in order to have a full legal copy.
No. It, like all editions of Microsoft Office, must be purchased. But you can download a free Office Suite nearly identical to Microsoft Office at openoffice.org.