Am I Using Office For Mac 32 Bit Or 64 Bit
I recently had a MacBook crash and had all the data transferred from it to a new MacBook Air, including the Microsoft Office for Mac 2011. However, when I try to open any of my Microsoft Office, it asks for a product key. Product Key recovery for Mac Office 2011 I have recently upgraded my computer and transferred all my applications/files using TimeMachine. It was an easy transition, but not for Microsoft Office 2011. Hi, Thank you for choosing Microsoft Office Community and thanks for providing us an opportunity to assist you. I understand that you lost the Product key and the Invoice for Office 2011 on MAC. Once you have your product key, see Activate Office for Mac 2011. When you install or reinstall Microsoft Office, you are prompted to enter the product key. The product key is used during installation to 'unlock' the software. Product key recovery for microsoft office 2011 for mac. How can I recover my MS Office 2011 product key? Is it possible to recover an Office 2011 key from a serial number. What is the best way to move Microsoft Office 2011 to a new Mac? How can I find the product key of Office 2011 after restoring from backup?
If an HP software download page does not list 32-bit or 64-bit, the system type is 32-bit. Find 32-bit or 64-bit system type and Windows version in Windows 10 Determine which version of Windows 10 you are using, and if it is 32-bit or 64-bit. Detect Windows Server version 32/64-bit in CLI OS version: 32-bit or 64-bit? How do I determine if my Windows system is 32-bit or 64-bit from the commandline? I want to know the bitness of the operating system, not the hardware. This question applies strictly to command line only, I don't want any GUI solutions.
Note: If you don't see Account or you already have a file or document open, choose File from the menu, and then select either Account or Help from the list on the left. • Under Product Information, you'll find your Office product name and, in some cases, the full version number. 1 - Product name, such as Office 365 ProPlus or Office Home and Student. 2 - Version number, which includes version, build number, and the type of installation such as Click-to-run or Windows Store. • For more information, such as the bit-version, choose About Excel. A dialog box opens, showing the full version number and bit version (32-bit or 64-bit).
See Also • •.
I've just accessed 'Teams' and get the distinct impression it won't make a hill of beans difference whether you get the 32b or 64b client. I accessed through the web and used the 'get a desktop client' link at the top and it downloaded and installed the 64 bit version (Teams_windows_x64.exe). Looks like a Store App on Win 10.
Later I found the 'get an application' page that offers Windows, Mac, various mobile clients (including Windows Phone, OMG, OMG) and that offers a 32 bit as well (Teams_windows.exe). Didn't install that one.
In any case, the web and these applications are interfaces to team collaboration web services. How bad is kraft mac and cheese for you. They aren't diresctly tied to Office products IMHO, so what version of Office is likely irrelevent.
I in fact installed the 64b Teams client along with my 32b copy of MS Office. I don't think Teams is going to care, unless you happen to have a 32bit machine.
Yes they still exist, my Dell Venue 11 is running 32bit Win 10. In this case, I think install the one appropriate for your OS. MS's opinion on which Office to use is covered in the link posted near the beginning of the thread. The KB is just for Office, and I wasn't suggesting it applies to Teams.
Teams didn't even exist when the Office 'guidance' was penned. Heck O365 didn't exist. The Office requirement to do one or the other stems from their being a lot of common code, routines, libraries, such that you can't do some 32 and some 64. You can't install 32 bit Office Premium and 64 bit Project. The Team clients seem to be independent of that Office architecture. It's a feature of Office 365, not a component of the Office Suite. That's why I say it doesn't matter, other than you couldn't do the 64 bit client on a 32 bit OS.
Still some words from MS would be nice. Thank you for this dialog. I have a 32-bit Office 365 on my x64 Windows 10 PC (because 32-bit Office is MS Recommended), so I was curious if an x64 MS Teams would work because I faced issues while trying to install a 64-bit Visio.
However, the states that ' The architecture (32-bit vs. 64-bit) of Microsoft Teams is agnostic to the architecture of Windows and Office that is installed.' This means that one can (and ideally should) go with the 64-bit version of MS Teams (unless of-course your PC uses a 32-bit Processor OS).