Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Legacy Archives

Big Fixes for Mac Office 2008

Add as a preferred source on Google

Microsoft’s Mac Business Unit has released a significant set of fixes to its Office 2008 productivity suite for Mac OS X. The Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac 12.0.1 update includes a number of critical fixes, patches security vulnerabilities, and addresses a number of other bugs that have bitten some Macintosh users. The update is available as a standalone 114 MB download, and will likely turn up in Microsoft Office’s AutoUpdate feature…assuming users have installed the 2.1.1 update to the AutoUpdate feature.

Microsoft has detailed a number of improvements and fixes in its technical note about the Office 2008 12.0.1 update; important improvements include fixing an Excel security vulnerability that could have enabled attackers to execute code on users’ systems and a fix to the Office installer that meant Office application files were owned by the wrong user ID (the update goes back and corrects the permissions). The update includes a number of application-specific fixes, including a patch for Word crashing on first launch when attempting to import older application settings, several cosmetic and display fixes for Excel (along with a WORKDAY function that actually works on Macs using the 1904 date system), and fixes for PowerPoint that enable it to save presentations reliably over a network using SMB, and save presentations without corrupting audio files. Italian users will be happy to note that Word 2008 no longer crashes when trying to check spelling or grammar with an Italian keyboard.

Recommended Videos

The Office for Mac 2008 12.0.1 update is a free download.

Geoff Duncan
Former Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
Topics
One of the most capable desktop processors available just got $125 cheaper: AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D down to $573
AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D drops to $573.99 (18% off): 16-core, 144MB cache, AM5, 3D V-Cache.
AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D deal

The AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D is down to $573.99 in a limited-time deal, a $125 saving off its $699 list price, and it represents something AMD hadn't offered before: a 3D V-Cache processor with a high enough core count to handle demanding creative and professional workloads without sacrificing the gaming performance that cache stacking delivers. For anyone running one machine for everything, this is the processor the 9000 series has been building toward.

get the deal

Read more
Adobe Firefly AI is now live publicly, hoping you’ll talk to an AI and get work done
Firefly AI Assistant can to handle your entire creative workflow
adobe-firefly-ai-assitant-public-beta

Adobe just opened up the public beta for Firefly AI Assistant. It is a conversational AI agent that sits across your entire Creative Cloud suite and handles multi-step workflows on your behalf.

You just have to describe what you want, and the assistant will figure out which Adobe tools to use and in what order, including Photoshop, Lightroom, Premiere, Firefly, and others.

Read more
Meta’s latest outrageous deal is getting solar power beamed even at night from satellites
Meta's deal with Overview Energy isn't just about clean power. It's a preview of what keeping AI running sustainably at planetary scale is going to require.
Satellite by Starlink

Out of all the things Meta has ever been accused of, thinking small hasn’t been one of them. 

The company that owns the most popular social media and messaging platforms like Facebook, Instagram, Messenger, and WhatsApp, is now looking at beaming sunlight from space to the Earth’s surface for powering its AI data centers after dark (via TechCrunch). 

Read more