

Could be bulk accounts associated with universities and businessesWhere do these come from, as they seem to have a infinite number of them, is there a activation method that generates them?
Edit: this is looking stranger:
I dunno makes sense if they buy 10-15k licenses and 3k just get leftover, if they are charged per license though this is embezzlement.Could be bulk accounts associated with universities and businesses
The business spends so much money to be able to provide keys to all of its users - and can generate them willy nilly
Perhaps some IT guy is generating accounts and selling them
Made a resume in open office once, found out it looked like garbage in real ms office (my fault I suppose for not making it into a pdf, but some companies only want .docx (is rare most accept pdf, could be these are the assholes who look at thing like edit history.)Out of curiosity, why not use openoffice? Or an alternative that is free. There is no reason to pay for a word processing program or spreadsheet.
Did you try Google Docs? That's my recommendation for most people.Made a resume in open office once, found out it looked like garbage in real ms office (my fault I suppose for not making it into a pdf, but some companies only want .docx (is rare most accept pdf, could be these are the assholes who look at thing like edit history.)
Google docs, I think might still have issues if the place has an older version of office, I am not certain though.Did you try Google Docs? That's my recommendation for most people.

One can easily convert .docx files to .doc files, assuming that's the problem you're describing. Office 2003 and older usually cannot read the newer .docx format introduced in Office 2007. Alternatively, saving the file as .rtf might also work for older versions of Office.Google docs, I think might still have issues if the place has an older version of office, I am not certain though.
Another option is getting a license from a college student (if you know any)
They get it for free most of the time
At my uni we have like 4 options for different versions of office - likely they are only using 1 key for 1 version, and have some keys left over
What timeframe was this? Libre Office forked some years ago (back when Sun was sold to Oracle and things were a bit up in the air) and is the thing most suggest nowadays if you are going to go that way. The Open Office peeps have done some stuff in the years since but most focus went to Libre. While not perfect I tend to find the error rate is about what Microsoft introduces into their own stuff, and for legacy documents it often bears out Microsoft's own efforts.Made a resume in open office once, found out it looked like garbage in real ms office (my fault I suppose for not making it into a pdf, but some companies only want .docx (is rare most accept pdf, could be these are the assholes who look at thing like edit history.)

All of that is garbage, use LaTeX! /sLibreOffice is garbage, Google Docs is mega garbage, Office is trivial to pirate.
All of that is garbage, use LaTeX! /s
Because opinions.

I actually kind of agree oddly.LaTeX is a thing where there is a matter of preference. No one actually prefers LibreOffice in any substantive way, it is lacking in almost every department. It is a thing of philosophy, that old GNU garbage that the world looked at and said 'nah' to. Google Docs is minimally functional at best. Excellent for collaboration, awful for everything else.
It's 3 dollars. They give you an edu email probably. I bought an edu email for a dollar, and got free 6 months of Prime, and unlimited Google drive, was well worth the dollar, lol.Where do these come from, as they seem to have a infinite number of them, is there a activation method that generates them?
Edit: this is looking stranger:
No one actually prefers LibreOffice in any substantive way, it is lacking in almost every department.