Tohelp with issues you might encounter when installing Microsoft 365 because of slow speeds or unreliable connections, as a first step download the Support and Recovery Assistant tool. (For information about this tool, go here.)
If the Microsoft Support and Recovery Assistant didn't help, follow the steps below that are specific to your plan. You need to be connected to the internet to download this installer file, but once that's done, you can then install Microsoft 365 offline on a PC at your convenience.
If your Microsoft 365 product is one of the following, you have a Microsoft 365 for home product. This can be a subscription, or a one-time purchase of Microsoft 365 Office, or individual Microsoft 365 application. These products are usually associated with a personal Microsoft account.
If your Microsoft 365 product is one of the following, you have a Microsoft 365 for business product. These products are usually associated with a work or school account, and your Microsoft 365 license (if your subscription has one) came from the organization where you work or go to school.
To download the offline installer, go to
www.office.com. If you're not already signed in with the Microsoft account associated with your copy of Microsoft 365 or Microsoft 365 do that now. If you're signed in with a different account, sign out of that and then sign in again with the correct Microsoft account.
Once the download is complete, open File Explorer and locate a new virtual drive, for example (D:). This drive contains the Microsoft 365 installation files. If you don't see the new drive, locate the image file you downloaded and double-click it. The new drive should appear in your directory.
Select the Microsoft 365 folder from the virtual drive and then double-click either the Setup32.exe to install the 32-bit version of Microsoft 365, or Setup64.exe to install the 64-bit version to begin the offline installation. If you're not sure which version is right for you, see Choose the 64-bit or 32-bit version of Office.
If you have a Microsoft 365 for business product you can use the Microsoft 365 Deployment Tool (ODT) to download and install Microsoft 365 or Microsoft 365 offline. The tool is designed for enterprise environments and runs from the command line, so the steps are more complicated--but they'll still work for installation on a single device.
You must have a Microsoft 365 or Microsoft 365 license assigned to you to install and activate the Microsoft 365 apps. To check if you have one, see What Microsoft 365 business product or license do I have?
If you have a Microsoft 365 Apps for business or Microsoft 365 Business Standard plan, you need to download the Microsoft 365 Apps for business version. For all other plans, download the Microsoft 365 Apps for enterprise version. See the following if you're not sure which version to install:
It can take a while to finish downloading and it may look like nothing is happening while the files are downloading. You'll know the installation is complete once the dialog box closes on its own, and a new folder called Office appears in the ODT folder you created earlier.
Were these steps helpful? If so, please let us know at the bottom of this topic. If they weren't, and you're still having trouble installing Office, tell us what you were trying to do and where you had difficulties. We'll use your feedback to double-check our steps and provide additional information.
I need an offline installer with most of the utilities commonly needed. Somehow the default installer confuses me with all its package selection. I installed Cygwin but I can't find the diff utility after the installation.
Here are instructions assuming you want to install Cygwin on a computer with no Internet connection. I assume that you have access to another computer with an Internet connection. Start on the connected computer:
Have a look at GnuWin32 instead. It's Windows ports of the command line tools and nothing else. Here is the installer for the GnuWin32 diff.exe. There are offline installers for all the common tools.
There is another solution to creating an offline Cygwin installer, which is using 'pmcyg' ( ). If you give pmcyg a list of Cygwin packages you'd like to have available, it will automatically download all of them, their dependencies, and the setup.exe into a folder that you can then burn onto a cdrom.
I'm not a big fan of Cygwin. It is good if you have some Unix code that requires a full POSIX system, I suppose. Even then, using it renders your programs GPL (due to the GPLed DLL), unless you pay Red Hat for a different license.
Most people should be using MinGW (and MSYS) instead. This gives you the Unix shell and utilities (even compilers, if you want them) without the purposely infectious DLL. Most of the folks using GNU compilers on Windows are using MinGW (although some don't realise it).
The SourceForge download page is here. I'd suggest starting with the MSYS Base System package, which will give you the coreutils, Bash, make, tar, etc. If there's other stuff you need, you can pick and choose from the list of packages.
I'll admit there's not much of a need. I ran into a situation with my HTPC that made me think that I was going to need to reinstall Emby Server but I don't have the computer on the network at the moment because I moved my switch far enough away that the cable doesn't reach.
There is no option in the installer to "Repair" or "Change" and installation so I thought I'd download Emby to a USB drive and rerun setup. Given that HTPCs need to be connected to the Internet for guide info to populate I understand why Emby uses an online installer, maybe the better option is to have that "Repair" "Change" or "Modify" option added to the installer.
FYI, my problem had nothing to do with Emby per se. My configuration is a problem which is why I submitted another post about changing the Local Address that Emby is using from an IP address to a name.
I was looking for one too. My reasoning for this is the troublesome firewall configuration as I've set Windows' firewall to block unknown outgoing connections too. To actually allow the installer to finish I had to create a few rules for the firewall:
I was looking for one too, bit of a thread hijack but I'm currently trying to install on Windows Home Server 2011 and the download is hanging, it gets about halfway and then stops. I know this isn't a problem Emby's end as it is working fine on another PC on the same network.
I just want to install it now, and an offline installer would help, but I need to sort this problem out moving forwards. Anyone any idea why it is doing this? I'm not experienced with Windows server OS's so I suspect there's something special I have to do
I need this as well as I do not have internet access at home. So I have an emby server on my laptop at work and the other on my mac at home. I would usually just tether to my phone, but currently waiting on network operator to make signal good enough to actually get online first. (Live out in the bush. hahaha).
yea because i have been deleting old beta and dev builds. they come so fast that if you're just trying to find the latest stable you have to first scroll through pages and pages of dev and beta builds.
The URLs are related, unless the untrusted source redirects. But why subject yourself to possible risks when, as you stated, the official high integrity sources are just as easy to obtain the MB4 installers.
I was able to select Windows 7 and download the installer file, however when I transferred this file to the offline Windows 7 PC running the installer gave a "Connection Failed" error and tried to open Internet Explorer.
If I double slick the installer first I need to click "Yes" on the User Account Control dialog box to confirm the installation, but then I get another dialog box with a button that tells me to "Download and install this feature" and it will get the required files from Windows update and complete the installation. I would like to install the required files completely offline. How can I perform an offline installation?
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