

The redeem code box was causing outages & latency.If you're wincing at Microsoft Office's price because you're a student, you may be entitled to Office 365 for free. Turns out they had sold so many keys they got hammered today. I used support for both stack and topfast.Īsked another question and stack helped out also received a receipt from topfastkeys with the office key.entered the key given into setup and the download was successful.you manually go to the office setup page for Microsoft.the cost is 249 (in pounds) then backed out with the redemption key from stack.hitting the redemption button takes you a billing page for topfastkeys.A link sends you to a redemption page on topfastkeys (UK).Stack provides a key which is meant for topfastkeys.got an email confirming with a link to the next step.Made an account at stacksocial (who thought up this name?).We aren't even power users, I can't imagine how frustrating it must be for some people.īored tonight so I bought a key for new build. It is also slow as molasses when it initially loads a file, and multiple times my colleagues and I have had our pictures replaced by "loading" icons. (you can press the enter key right after your equation and then try to resize). You need to actually highlight the equation and the space beside it to change the font size. But to change the size of the font takes more than just highlighting the equation and upping the size. Was miserably using Equatio for a while to type math equations and now google docs finally allows you to type equations. I want to insert a text box like in MS word and you gotta insert it like a picture. But because I often want to insert pictures and have tables in different places and all this kind of stuff it is just trash.

I love it for the cloud sync and being able to colab with people in real time. The editing/formatting options are still trash after so many years compared to MS Word. I use google docs daily at school, and it pisses me off daily. A lot of big companies are effectively locked in to Microsoft due to years of Outlook emails and calendar events, Excel macros, etc.īut among the smaller but very much "real world" tech companies I've worked at, every one of them used Google – at least for email and calendar, and usually for more – from the start. You're right that G Suite / Google Workplace "taking over" is overstating it.
