โFeb-04-2020 11:32 AM
โFeb-19-2020 12:49 PM
jodeb720 wrote:
crcr,
There's a company called Techsoup. find out if your church has a relationship with them. They are a coordinator between large corporations (e.g. Microsoft) and non profits.
They allow non profits (like your church) to obtain, for free a license for MS Office 365 - and Microsoft gets to write off the full MSRP of the software with the IRS. It's a win/win for everybody.
Check with your church and find out if they have an account.
They can request a license for Office 365, for free, and it only takes a couple of days for the license to be provisioned by Techsoup.org.
I had 25 people at my church, I got a copy of Windows server, multiple copies of Windows 10, and office 365 for all the staff (both Mac's and PC's).
The church benefitted because it was all legal licenses, they paid almost nothing for the 'affiliation fee' (like 50.00 if memory serves) and they had a clean, tight environment.
Something to look into.
The other option is this.
If you work for a large corporation, Microsoft technically has a home version of MS office (that you can purchase from your companies website for 50.00 a year). It's an annual license for the software on your machine, as long as you're employed by your company.
Last - if you or any of your children are enrolled in school, the same applies for teachers/students as an education license. They offer the same thing at a heavily discounted cost for teachers and students (college, etc).
โFeb-19-2020 05:26 AM
โFeb-09-2020 09:11 PM
โFeb-07-2020 07:57 PM
3) Buy M-soft Office 365 downloads on ebay for as little as $5. I see at this link: Click here
โFeb-07-2020 07:55 PM
1492 wrote:
Just a thought, but if you work for any company that has a Microsoft Office 365 enterprise license, you may want to find out if it permits free install of Office 2016/2019 for personal use? My work enterprise license allows each staff up to 5 free installs of Office 2019 on our own PCs or MACs. I've only installed one my home desktop PC so far.
โFeb-07-2020 03:04 PM
โFeb-07-2020 11:50 AM
crcr wrote:
OK, thanks for that suggestion. I just tried doing exactly that, and Excel still will not open the file. It just stays stuck on the dialog box and never opens:
"Microsoft Excel 2010
Opening in Protected View"
Thanks to everyone for all your tips and suggestions. At least I am able to open the file in Libre Office.
โFeb-07-2020 06:54 AM
Gdetrailer wrote:
Windows 10 OS allows long file names and long file names with multiple "dots" in it to work, been that way since XP.
Was going to make another suggestion I bounced across, try opening a blank Excel workbook first, then choose file and open your target file.
If that opens then the issue most like is the file association has been corrupted and Win10 has no way to determine what program actually is supposed to open it.
Installing Libre or Open Office, that association will get corrected and pointed to Libre or Open Office which ever you installed.
Libre or Open Office does work, but I have had issues with Open Office not handling some document formatting which can affect your document layout. Libre may exhibit the same issue since it pretty much is similar design and may even share some code as Open Office.
I would recommend OP try the suggestion I gave above so all bases are covered.
I have 2013 at work and have no issue opening 2016, 2019 and Office 365 xlsx files so I really do think that the file association was corrupted..
โFeb-05-2020 03:36 PM
โFeb-05-2020 02:23 PM
wnjj wrote:ktmrfs wrote:crcr wrote:
Thanks to all for your helpful responses. Much appreciated!
The file that was sent to me that I am unable to open right now, is an Excel file and has the following suffix after the file name:
.nonp.xlsx
So I tried removing the x from the end, and the file still won't open in my 2010 M-soft Excel. Any suggestions?
Regarding enabling Macros, I searched and found instructions to do that, and I find that Macros are already enabled in my M-soft Office Excel 2010, even though I had never touched those settings before.
If I understand correctly the file name is something like Filename.nonp.xlxs. If this is the case, the likely issue is that the file was named and saved incorrectly. A office file should be Filename.xlxs or filename.docx NOT filename.something.xlxs
until the file is saved correctly office or likely the clones won't open it.
I don't know about that. The extension is always everything after the last '.'
I renamed a file and it still opened ok with 2 dots in the name.
โFeb-05-2020 02:02 PM
ktmrfs wrote:crcr wrote:
Thanks to all for your helpful responses. Much appreciated!
The file that was sent to me that I am unable to open right now, is an Excel file and has the following suffix after the file name:
.nonp.xlsx
So I tried removing the x from the end, and the file still won't open in my 2010 M-soft Excel. Any suggestions?
Regarding enabling Macros, I searched and found instructions to do that, and I find that Macros are already enabled in my M-soft Office Excel 2010, even though I had never touched those settings before.
If I understand correctly the file name is something like Filename.nonp.xlxs. If this is the case, the likely issue is that the file was named and saved incorrectly. A office file should be Filename.xlxs or filename.docx NOT filename.something.xlxs
until the file is saved correctly office or likely the clones won't open it.
โFeb-05-2020 01:22 PM
crcr wrote:
Thanks to all for your helpful responses. Much appreciated!
The file that was sent to me that I am unable to open right now, is an Excel file and has the following suffix after the file name:
.nonp.xlsx
So I tried removing the x from the end, and the file still won't open in my 2010 M-soft Excel. Any suggestions?
Regarding enabling Macros, I searched and found instructions to do that, and I find that Macros are already enabled in my M-soft Office Excel 2010, even though I had never touched those settings before.
โFeb-05-2020 11:24 AM
โFeb-05-2020 10:34 AM
2012Coleman wrote:
are those documents coming from a non profit organization by chance?