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Microsoft Excel Turns 40, Remains Stubbornly Unkillable
mardi 9 décembre 2025, 15:41 , par Slashdot
The software traces its origins to a 1983 Microsoft offsite under the code name Odyssey, where engineers set out to clone Lotus 1-2-3. That program had itself cloned VisiCalc, the first computerized spreadsheet, created by Dan Bricklin for the Apple II in the late 1970s. Bricklin never patented VisiCalc. 'Financially it would have been great if we'd have been able to patent it,' he told Bloomberg. 'And there would be a Bricklin Building at MIT, instead of a Gates Building.' Excel now counts an estimated 500 million paying users. The Pentagon pays for 2 million Microsoft 365 licenses. Google's free Sheets product, launched in 2006, captured casual use cases like potluck sign-ups but failed to dislodge Excel from enterprise work. AI chatbots present the latest challenge, but venture capitalists say nearly every AI spreadsheet startup they meet builds on top of Excel rather than replacing it. Read more of this story at Slashdot.
https://it.slashdot.org/story/25/12/09/1428239/microsoft-excel-turns-40-remains-stubbornly-unkillabl...
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mar. 9 déc. - 21:33 CET
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