Microsoft Offers $60 MS Office to College Students

Microsoft has announced on Wednesday, a $60 web-based version of the company's Microsoft Office Ultimate 2007 software that will be exclusively available to college students. Microsoft dubbed their latest promotion as
Microsoft Offers $60 MS Office to College Students
 the "The Ultimate Steal" and will run until April 30, 2008. The promotion already started in the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, and will be available to France, Italy, and Spain starting September 20, 2007.

The cheapest Microsoft Office Suite is the Microsoft Office Home and Student 2007 which costs $149 and only includes the standard MS Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote applications. The Microsoft Office Ultimate 2007 Edition has a retail price of about $679 and includes software such as: Access 2007, Accounting Express 2007, Excel 2007, InfoPath 2007, Groove 2007, OneNote 2007, Outlook 2007 with Business Contact Manager, PowerPoint 2007, Publisher 2007, and Word 2007. With Microsoft's promotion, students will be able to get a huge discount on the Office Ultimate 2007 edition but students have first to be eligible for the promo.

According to the Ultimate Steal Website, in order to be eligible, a student must first have a valid email address at a U.S. educational institution ending in .edu and be actively enrolled in that institution with at least .5 course load. In addition, students should also be able to provide Microsoft in a proof of enrollment status such as a student card. If the student fails to provide Microsoft with a proof of enrollment, they have to pay the full retail price of the Office Ultimate 2007. However once the student qualifies, they will be able to download the Office Ultimate 2007. Microsoft is only offering this as a web based download and if students want a physical DVD, they have to pay a small charge which was not disclosed in the Ultimate Steal website. According to Microsoft's website, students outside the United States will have to pay 18 Euros, GBP 12.95 or C$ 22 for a one-year subscription license.

 
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Microsoft is not verifying anything, they just ask for your college email. BUT THE INSTALL FAILS RIGHT IN THE MIDDLE. Wonder why that is??? OpenOffice is still better and it is FREE!!!

Posted on 04/26/2008 at 6:04:36 PM

Nice article. Well sometimes I feel that MS office is not that perfect enough. So I tried to convert powerpoint to dvd,the conversion tool Moyea PPT to DVD Burner sounds great.anybody interest in it? Explore: http://www.dvd-ppt-slideshow.com

Posted on 09/17/2007 at 4:09:00 AM

I'm actually surprised Microsoft doesn't just bundle the software pre-installed by now.

Posted on 09/14/2007 at 7:09:00 AM

Thanks for the info. Nice article.

Posted on 09/13/2007 at 9:09:00 PM

Microsoft is funny! There are too many free options out there!

Posted on 09/13/2007 at 7:09:00 PM

I personally use OpenOffice.org(free). My school provides both and I still generally use OpenOffice.org. This is a cool article though, didn't know they were offering this.

Posted on 09/13/2007 at 7:09:00 PM

I'm not a college student but I'd like to get Office 2007 for $60. Any programs for the middle-aged? :-)

Posted on 09/13/2007 at 6:09:00 PM

Come on Microsoft, it's not like college students actually pay for software. "The Ultimate Steal" would be pirating Office Enterprise 2007. I must admit Office 2007 is great software, I recommend anyone go check it out. Also, Microsoft OneNote can be really helpful for a student enrolled in college.

Posted on 09/13/2007 at 5:09:00 PM

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