Download Microsoft Office 2007 Iso Google Drive

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Jeana Rodia

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Aug 3, 2024, 4:50:22 PM8/3/24
to leosluclapent

There is no trace of Microsoft office on my computer and I don't think there has been for more than 5 years, but just today there appeared a drive Q labeled microsoft office click-to-run 2010 (protected). I can't remove it. All the answers on answers.microsoft seem to think that either uninstalling microsoft office will remove it or that you simply can't remove it. I'd appreciate anyone that can tell me why it's there or how to remove it.

You should be able to change its label by heading into the registry to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\DriveIcons\Q, and then editing the (Default) setting in the DefaultLabel sub key.

I ran the exe's on my win 7 comp without issues.
I also scanned them for viruses, they are clean.
That being said, they are not verified and supported by microsoft, so use at your own risk.

My gut feeling is that getting to grips with using Mlinks is the way to go as this is potentially far more efficient and straightforward. For example one could go on to move the Outlook ".ost" files off drive C:.

This is a worrying trend from Microsoft. Microsoft deliberately neglects the user rights to install their software on another drive location because they want you use use up your SSD local storage to incentivize the use Microsoft One Drive cloud storage. This is so malicious. Please Microsoft, listen to your users needs or you'll have more and more users switching to open source alternatives like OpenOffice.

There seems to be a trend for the system to be too "Smart" to make decision for us. But it boils down to UX designer really haven't considered a sizable minority has the SSD + HDD option where they didn't have a very big SSD because of the time they bought the PC/Laptop. There are workarounds that you have to go into safemode as those background processes are unloaded, move the folder to d driver and create a symbolic link, you almost have to do it for every software like this (there are ones that automatically install to appdata too). I have also tried to move the whole [program files] to another drive (you need to change NTFS ownership of windows store folder to successfully move it), but it will break Microsoft store apps (even calc), and after moving it will show "this system is not configured to use the software"(not the exact word, but something like that), but works for other software like Adobe CC suite, autodesk fusion360 (so that you don't have to reboot, move symbolic link every time you install a software).

I don't think it's even about one drive either, as the problem when having like 128G/256G SSD for system drive (with recovery + reserved, space left is even less) is that somehow by design a lot of large software, even you select data drive to install, it will put a very large amount of file (likely shared library, etc.) onto c drive, there's no amount of one drive that can solve the problem. It's just UX design team haven't thoughtfully gone through all the use case. As microsoft constantly collects data, it will be trivially easy for microsoft to profile which files and folders must remain on SSD to have a fast boot and load time and mount individual SSD chunks to the bigger HDD only for those essential files, that's transparent to the user (user only sees the larger HDD, the mapping happens in background). But at 2022, there will be no incentive to solve the problem as that specific era technology of small SSD+HDD is mostly phasing out (now you at least get a 512 SSD + 1THDD, where SSD space is no longer a problem)

I was able to save it to my D: drive and install it successfully. While C2R may have been developed with the best of intentions, whoever claims the current version with no way to designate a destination can go format an aardvark.

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Applications from every other vendor allow me to choose where to install their products. But Microsoft, who makes the OS that is running on my computer, seems to find that too difficult to accomplish.

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