If it is simply the motherboard and not a hard drive or an SSD drive you should be able to run office without any re-installation after installing a new motherboard (and attaching the old drive). My caveat is that I am using Linux so I don't know if simply replacing a motherboard that utilizes MS Windows would affect access to what is on your drives. (You may need to register your license, but the data should not be affected.)A friend of mine has had his motherboard die.
I believe that one could uninstall office and reinstall on the new computer?
As he has no ability to uninstall, does anyone know a workaround please?
No, his desktop is around 15 years old, so is going to buy a new one.If it is simply the motherboard and not a hard drive or an SSD drive you should be able to run office without any re-installation after installing a new motherboard (and attaching the old drive). My caveat is that I am using Linux so I don't know if simply replacing a motherboard that utilizes MS Windows would affect access to what is on your drives. (You may need to register your license, but the data should not be affected.)
However he ended up with New Outlook, and when I tried downloading Classic Outlook, it wanted him to purchase 365 subscription.
So we removed everything Office and bought and Installed Office LTSC 2024.
Though this version, did not accept default email account?The email account used is what ever account file you are in at the time, but he can live with that
I would imagine he would like to recover all emails he received, sent, contacts list, calendar events, and continue to use the email address(es) he was using before. One of the beauties of using the Thunderbird email client is that all the above mentioned items are saved locally on my desktop and I make daily backups of it.If he still has a file names <his-old-account-name>.pst located under \users\<his-computer-login-name>\documents\Outlook files\ then his previous files might be intact. Copy them to the corresponding place on the new machine and then you could revert to the old name.
I set up his accounts again. I had to anyway, even if I had access to his old pst files, which I did, as the old disk was fine. That is now his backup disk and he can move any old data at his leisure.If he still has a file names <his-old-account-name>.pst located under \users\<his-computer-login-name>\documents\Outlook files\ then his previous files might be intact. Copy them to the corresponding place on the new machine and then you could revert to the old name.