Go to System Preferences on your apple mac and click on the SHARING icon. From there check/tick BLUETOOTH SHARING and FILE SHARING Now the Bluetooth is on and you can transfer files to other devices. How to turn on bluetooth for mac. If you reboot and unplug the keyboard, the OS will automatically enable Bluetooth and start looking for BT keyboards and mice. From Apple's official documentation: Turn on your Mac. If no USB mouse is detected, the Mac will power up to the Bluetooth trackpad or mouse setup assistant. Step 1, Click. It’s usually at the bottom-left corner of the screen.Step 2, Click. It’s near the bottom-left corner of the Windows menu. This opens your settings.Step 3, Click Devices. It’s the icon with a keyboard and speaker. Bluetooth is a wireless technology that you can use to connect a keyboard and mouse to your Mac. While WiFi connects the computers and other devices within a home or place of business to create a local-area network, Bluetooth has a much shorter range, about 30 feet.
Designed for individual usage, Office 365 Personal allows you to install the applications on one PC or Mac and one tablet for $6.99 per month. Office 365 Home, the version designed for families, enables you to install the office productivity applications on five PCs or Macs plus five tablets for $9.99 per month.
GrammarPolice wrote: Da_Schmoo wrote: GrammarPolice wrote: How many machines are there? If it's more than 10 I'd seriously consider getting a Volume License. It will make tracking / activation / reinstalling much easier. Much easier, yes. But at double the cost which just isn't feasible for many organizations.Double?

That completely depends on which version of Office you're talking about. If you compare a low end retail version to the full Pro VL version, sure, double is probably right. Not quite double but close. Office Home & Business runs about $230. The lowest level VL Office is Standard which sells for about $380.
Still a big jump with the only difference in content is the addition of Publisher in Standard. Da_Schmoo wrote: GrammarPolice wrote: Da_Schmoo wrote: GrammarPolice wrote: How many machines are there? If it's more than 10 I'd seriously consider getting a Volume License. It will make tracking / activation / reinstalling much easier. Much easier, yes. But at double the cost which just isn't feasible for many organizations.Double? That completely depends on which version of Office you're talking about.
If you compare a low end retail version to the full Pro VL version, sure, double is probably right. Not quite double but close. Office Home & Business runs about $230. The lowest level VL Office is Standard which sells for about $380. Still a big jump with the only difference in content is the addition of Publisher in Standard.Publisher sells for $109 on its own, on the MS store. Plus you get the management abilities of VL. It really is a matter of figuring out what you need and what expenses make sense in your situation.
GrammarPolice wrote: Da_Schmoo wrote: GrammarPolice wrote: Da_Schmoo wrote: GrammarPolice wrote: How many machines are there? If it's more than 10 I'd seriously consider getting a Volume License. It will make tracking / activation / reinstalling much easier. Much easier, yes.
But at double the cost which just isn't feasible for many organizations.Double? That completely depends on which version of Office you're talking about.
If you compare a low end retail version to the full Pro VL version, sure, double is probably right. Not quite double but close. Office Home & Business runs about $230.
The lowest level VL Office is Standard which sells for about $380. Still a big jump with the only difference in content is the addition of Publisher in Standard.Publisher sells for $109 on its own, on the MS store. Plus you get the management abilities of VL. It really is a matter of figuring out what you need and what expenses make sense in your situation. I'm not disagreeing with you, I just know how customers, at least most of mine, think. ~$150 more per workstation just to save a few minutes entering some tracking data in a spreadsheet? We don't use Publisher, etc.
Most of my customers have moved to O365 anyway - $8.25/month for Office if you're just after the desktop apps. Romtom28 wrote: I think I am going to push for Office 365, and for now I am just going to order one copy of Office 2016 Pro so an employee can work with Access. Check accessibility of word document office for mac.
We are already set up with Exchange Online, and it looks like each user has activated Office via their work email address. I feel like this will be quite a project because it looks like it has been patched together quite a few times. Thanks for the input everybody! I had a great experience deploying O365 to over 100 devices. I used PDQ deploy and the package I built using the below link from Microsoft. Happy deploying!
