Hi Mark,
You can have two versions on one computer, but the
older one will not be a 'pure' version as it will use
shared feature files from the newer one.
http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=290576
If you're doing end user training that may be okay, but if you're
working with any macros or programming you may want
to have them in separate boot partitions.
=======
<<"Mark A." <fourtyfathoms@hotmail.com> wrote in message news:00b901c351f4$a663e320$a101280a@phx.gbl...
Does anyone know if there are any problems installing
Office 2000 AND Office XP on the same computer? For
training purposes I would like to have both installed on
a Windows 2000 Server with Terminal Services. Any info is
appreciated.
Thanks,
Mark A.>>>
--
Hope that helps,
Bob Buckland ?:-) MS Office Products family MVP
*Courtesy is not expensive and can pay big dividends*
http://go.CompuServe.com/MSOfficeForum?loc=us
Have a little fun with Office
http://microsoft.com/uk/office/xtra/
Get a Microsoft Certification of your Office App Skills:
http://microsoft.com/traincert/mcp/m...quirements.asp
Try the new MS Knowledge Base Help and Support Search Tools & FAQ:
http://support.microsoft.com
Choose the newsgroups focused on your MS Office applications:
via Browser:
http://communities.microsoft.com/new...cp=prod_office
by Newsreader: (Outlook Express)
news://msnews.microsoft.com