Microsoft Office Mac 11 Not Updating
High Sierra leaves Microsoft Office for Mac 2011 behind, 2016 edition needs updating. By Mike Wuerthele Tuesday, June 13, 2017, 09:21 am PT (12:21 pm ET) A support document published by Microsoft.
Mar 10, 2020 Update history for Office for Mac. Office for Mac that comes with an Office 365 subscription is updated on a regular basis to provide new features, security updates, and non-security updates. The following information is primarily intended for IT professionals that are deploying Office for Mac to the users in their organizations. Mar 12, 2020 Microsoft Office 2016 - Unmistakably Office, designed for Mac. The new versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, and OneNote provide the best of both worlds for Mac users - the familiar Office experience paired with the best of Mac. If you already use Office on a PC or iPad, you will find yourself right at home in Office 2016 for Mac. Automatic updating for Microsoft Office is not enabled. 3/30/2020; 3 minutes to read; Applies to: Office 365 Professional Plus, Office Standard 2019, Office Professional Plus 2016, Office Standard 2016, Office Home and Business 2013, Office Home and Student 2013, Office Professional 2013, Office Professional Plus 2013, Office Standard 2013. Mar 31, 2015 Want to know how to update your copy of Office Mac? Here's how to do it! Things you will need: 1. Office 2008 or newer 2. An internet connection 3. Patience Music Provided by Epidemic Sound ️.
Note
Office 365 ProPlus is being renamed to Microsoft 365 Apps for enterprise. For more information about this change, read this blog post.
Symptoms
By default, installations of Microsoft Office are configured to automatically update your Office installation when new updates are made publicly available. However, if you examine the Account section of the backstage, you may see that updates are disabled or that the command to manage updates is disabled or hidden. For example, the following figure indicates that updates are disabled in the backstage.
Cause
This issue occurs if updates have been manually disable or are managed through Group Policy settings.
Resolution
We recommend that you keep automatic updating enabled for Office installations because this configuration allows Office to automatically update with the latest fixes and security features. To re-enable automatic updates for Office, follow the steps below.
Manually configure automatic updates
As of September 25, 2017, macOS 10.13 High Sierra is publicly available for all Mac users to install. Office 2016 for Mac is fully supported on High Sierra. For the best experience, we recommend you update Office to version 15.38 or later. For updates regarding macOS 10.14 Mojave, see Microsoft Office support for macOS 10.14 Mojave. Mac high sierra download.
If your Office installation is not managed by Group Policy, you can manually re-enable automatic updates by following these steps. If you cannot follow these steps because the Update Options control is disabled or missing, your updates are being managed by Group Policy.
- Start any program.
- On the File tab, select Account.
Note: In Outlook, select Office Account. - On the right side, select Update Options, and then select Enable Updates.
- If you are asked whether you want to let Microsoft Office make changes to your computer, select Yes.
Automatic updates managed by Group Policy
Warning
Follow the steps in this section carefully. Serious problems might occur if you modify the registry incorrectly. Before you modify it, back up the registry for restoration in case problems occur.
If you cannot follow the steps in the 'Manually configure automatic updates' section, this is because the Update Options control is disabled or missing due to a Group Policy. For example, the following figure shows the Update Options control when the Enable Updates option is hidden through a Group Policy:
To examine the registry data that is associated with the Group Policy settings which control this feature, follow these steps:
- Start Registry Editor. To do this, take one of the following actions:
- In Windows 10 or Windows 8, press the Windows key + X, select Run, type regedit in the Open box, and then press Enter.
- In Windows 7 and Windows Vista, select Start, type regedit in the Start Search box, and then press Enter. If you are prompted for an administrator password or for confirmation, type the password, or select Allow.
- Locate and then select the following registry key:
Note: If this key does not exist in your Registry Editor, see How to add the registry key via policy below.
Microsoft 365 Apps for enterprise, Office 2019, and Office 2016
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINEsoftwarepoliciesmicrosoftoffice16.0commonOfficeUpdate
Office 2013
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINEsoftwareWow6432Nodemicrosoftoffice15.0commonOfficeUpdate
- Examine the following registry values under the OfficeUpdate key:
- DWORD: EnableAutomaticUpdates
Values:
0 = automatic updates are disabled
1 = automatic updates are enabled - DWORD: HideEnableDisableUpdates
Values:
1 = hide the menu option to enable or disable automatic updates
0 = show the menu option to enable or disable automatic updates
- If you have any questions or concerns about these policy settings, see your domain administrator.
How to add the registry key via policy
The registry key is added automatically when you install ADMX/ADML files. To do this:
Microsoft 365 Apps for enterprise, Office 2019, and Office 2016
- Always download the LATEST admin templates to a location of your choice:Administrative Template files (ADMX/ADML) and Office Customization Tool for Microsoft 365 Apps for enterprise, Office 2019, and Office 2016
- Select the Download button.
- Select either the x64 or the x86 build.
- Select Run and follow the prompts to install the software.
- Copy the *.admx files into the C:/Windows/PolicyDefinitions/ folder.
- Copy the *.adml files from the language-locale subfolder (for instance, 'en-US') into the respective language-locale folder under C:/Windows/PolicyDefinitions/.
Warning
Be sure to preserve the same language-locale PolicyDefinitions folder which is applicable to your environment.
Office 2013
- Go to the Office 2013 Administrative Template files (ADMX/ADML) and Office Customization Tool page.
- Select the Download button.
- Select either the x64 or the x86 build.
- Select Run and follow the prompts to install the software.
- Copy the *.admx files into the C:/Windows/PolicyDefinitions/ folder.
- Copy the *.adml files from the language-locale subfolder (for instance, 'en-US') into the respective language-locale folder under C:/Windows/PolicyDefinitions/.
Warning
Be sure to preserve the same language-locale PolicyDefinitions folder which is applicable to your environment.
After you copy the Administrative Template files to AD DS, you'll find the update policy settings under Computer Configuration > Policies > Administrative Templates > Microsoft Office 2016 (Machine) > Updates in the Group Policy Management Console. You'll also find a description of how to configure each policy setting.
More information
Office Mac 2011
For more information about configuring the update settings via GPO, see Configure update settings for Microsoft 365 Apps for enterprise.
Macs are not perfect even though one’s productivity is much higher with one. When things go wrong – they can sometimes really go wrong.
One customer had issues with a critical branding font that installs fine on everyone else’s Macbook but not theirs. I now know more about fonts that I ever wanted to know especially how Microsoft fonts fit into the Mac picture. I researched dozens of websites each adding a piece to the puzzle. Here we go …
- There are 4 font stores on your Mac
- user fonts stored in /Users/youraccount/Library/Fonts
- computer wide (all accounts) fonts in /Library/Fonts
- system fonts in /System/Library/Fonts (never ever touch these)
- Microsoft Office fonts in /Library/Fonts/Microsoft (ahhh I see)
- ONLY TTF fonts work for Office – or so MS claims
- To install fonts for MS Office 2011 – don’t double click them – this installs them naturally in the user fonts
- instead – start up Font Book (use the spotlight or magnifying glass to find it quick in the upper right of your Mac)
- drag them from your Finder onto Computer (under the Collection section at the left of the Font Book app)
- A reboot triggers the Mac Font store to sync with Office. Don’t forget to reboot before ripping your hair out
- Adding fonts to the user fonts will never show up in Microsoft Office products
- Don’t assume that because a font works in lets say Word, that it will appear in Excel – it might once the cache catches up
- Microsoft font cache file can be delete so it will force a refresh – but it can be in 2 places – check both. Microsoft moved it for Office 2011 for Mac for some computers different than others
- Lion? goto finder and hold the option key and …
- click the menu Go->Library or type in a folder /Library by choosing the Go->Go to Folder option then navigate eventually to /Library/Preferences/Microsoft/Office 2011
- not there? Microsoft moved them in later releases of Office 2011 to /Library/Application Support/Microsoft/Preferences/Office 2011 – even MS’ articles are incorrect!
- also you might need to look in /Users/yourname/Library/Application Support/Microsoft/Preferences/Office 2011
- when you re-start work or Excel you will now see a task completing to rebuild the cache files and if you observe the location above you will see new cache files
- Here is a link to completely remove Office on a mac and is the final puzzle piece that allowed me to solve this riddle http://support.microsoft.com/kb/2398768
Updating Microsoft Office 2010
Many thanks to these sites: