W
WM Lundin
I recently moved from MS Office 2003 to MS Office 2007. After losing the MDI
print device and gaining the XPS print device, I re-installed the MODI
software. I also updated Word 2007 to have the Save As ... PDF or XPS
formats.
I cannot convert multiple MDI or TIF into XPS.
Yes, I can open each MDI (now that I re-installed the old MODI software) and
print them to XPS one at a time.
I cannot open or import entire MDI, TIF, or XPS documents into MS Word.
Yes, I can copy and paste a single MDI or TIF page as an image into Word,
but not an entire file at once.
What are the benefits of using the MDI or XPS formats for documents, what is
their primary business or use case? I have not yet found a convenient way to
convert or re-use them; for archival purposes, these seem to have a much
shorter usable lifespan than hardcopy/paper.
In Office 2010 or Office {next after 2010} will there be a new document
format that will also be incompatable with MDI and XPS? Thanks.
print device and gaining the XPS print device, I re-installed the MODI
software. I also updated Word 2007 to have the Save As ... PDF or XPS
formats.
I cannot convert multiple MDI or TIF into XPS.
Yes, I can open each MDI (now that I re-installed the old MODI software) and
print them to XPS one at a time.
I cannot open or import entire MDI, TIF, or XPS documents into MS Word.
Yes, I can copy and paste a single MDI or TIF page as an image into Word,
but not an entire file at once.
What are the benefits of using the MDI or XPS formats for documents, what is
their primary business or use case? I have not yet found a convenient way to
convert or re-use them; for archival purposes, these seem to have a much
shorter usable lifespan than hardcopy/paper.
In Office 2010 or Office {next after 2010} will there be a new document
format that will also be incompatable with MDI and XPS? Thanks.