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Solve : Bit version of Microsoft Office and Install Program? |
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Answer» Here's my situation, trying to write a batch file that will show me the bit VERSION of Office installed, not the OS necessarily, and choose the bit version of Lync to install. Any Ideas? Thanks in advance.All 32bit programs installed on a 64 bit Windows OS will be in the Program Files(x86) folder. How's Zeus doin lately ? ? He has been involved in a controversy of a modern rather than ancient kind. He is depicted as a bull, the form he took when raping Europa, on the Greek 2-euro coin and on the United Kingdom identity card for visa holders. Mary Beard, Professor of Classics at Cambridge University, has criticised this for its apparent celebration of rape. Just don't worship Mary Beard...sounds LIKE every Liberal College Proff here in the states... I won't get started. Quote from: Salmon Trout on December 12, 2014, 10:51:58 AM Surely if you first check the bitness of the OS (if it's 32 bit you now know you have a 32 bit Office install) and if it's 64 bit then look in %ProgramFiles% (64 bit) or %ProgramFiles(x86)% (32 bit) for the Office folder (Office, Office10, Office11, Office12, Office14 or Office15) or else find the path of some common Office executable file such as Winword.exe or Excel.exe, you have your answer? Or am I missing something here? if this is some corporate thing, surely you know what your machines have installed anyhow? This will be a Lync rollout on about 300 machines. The majority, about 85%, are x64 OS's. But we don't know if the Office install is always x86 or x64. Also, Office does not always install in ProgramFiles or ProgramFilesx86. A lot of times it installs in the ProgramData folder, which does not determine if it's a x86 or x64. One more thing, I've had instances where a x86 Office installs in the ProgramFiles directory. Quote from: patio on December 12, 2014, 11:40:26 AM Just don't worship Mary Beard...sounds like every Liberal College Proff here in the states... Well, I am a liberal, and I am opposed to misogyny (like any sane person ought to be) but I don't really think Zeus needs to be dragged into the argument. Maybe in 50 years people will think differently.What version of Lync are you planning to use? The 64-bit Lync 2010 installation works with the 32-bit version of Microsoft Office. If you have a 64-bit machine with a 32-bit Office 2010, you can use the 64-bit Lync Installer. The 64-bit Lync client installation will install the 32-bit version of the Online Meeting Add-In for Lync 2010 for Outlook. The Lync client itself is actually only 32-bit – the 64-bit download is a 64-bit installer wrapping the 32-bit client. See here http://blog.insidelync.com/2012/02/top-10-faq-for-planning-a-lync-2010-client-deployment/ Quote from: col. sanders on December 12, 2014, 11:42:40 AM A lot of times it installs in the ProgramData folder That has got to be because the admin chose to install it there, right? Quote from: foxidrive on December 12, 2014, 12:40:48 PM That has got to be because the admin chose to install it there, right?Has to be. It does not default to that. |
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