CodeWeavers reports
Gone are [...] the days that we hopelessly tried to register Microsoft Office 2013. You read that right, people. [On November 2], we successfully registered Microsoft Office 2013 in a CrossOver 16 alpha build. We [can] also:
- Open, create, edit, save, and print Microsoft office documents
- Activate a copy of Microsoft Office 2013 [with a] product key or a 365 subscription
- Use Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Project
"Everyone at CodeWeavers is incredibly excited to see Microsoft Office 2013 installing, registering, and running in CrossOver. After four years of continued development, we are preparing to deliver support for the 2013 versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Project in CrossOver 16 (due out later this year). And we hope that our development will continue making strides to include support for Outlook 2013 and Microsoft Office 2016 in the coming months." -- James Ramey, President
(Score: 1, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 07 2016, @07:26PM
That's not the price for continuing to use it; that's the price for a subscription to updates. Once your subscription expires, you're free to continue using the final version your subscription let you download indefinitely. You just won't get updates.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday November 08 2016, @08:49AM
Based on my experience with regular wine, once you have a version that works, you want to stick with that one anyway.