Microsoft unveils new Office 2013!
This was a surprise, I am still getting to know 2010 :P better.
Microsoft Corp. CEO Steve Ballmer unveiled the customer preview of the new Microsoft Office, optimised for the Windows 8 and touch-based devices like tablets. The next release features an intuitive design that works beautifully with touch, stylus, mouse or keyboard across new Windows devices, including tablets. The new Office is social and unlocks modern scenarios in reading, note-taking, meetings and communications and will be delivered to subscribers through a cloud service that is always up to date. Unlike the earlier versions of Office, the new one is tied into a subscription service of Office 365 and depending on the version you pick, you'll be able to download 'apps' like Word, Excel, etc on a limited number of PCs using a single licence. While pricing details will be announced at the time of launch, here are the three subscription models you can opt for:
“We are taking bold steps at Microsoft,” Ballmer said at the press conference in San Francisco. “The new, modern Office will deliver unparalleled productivity and flexibility for both consumers and business customers. It is a cloud service and will fully light-up when paired with Windows 8.” Office responds to touch as naturally as it does to keyboard and mouse. Swipe your finger across the screen or pinch and zoom to read your documents and presentations. Author new content and access features with the touch of a finger. You can use a stylus to create content, take notes and access features. Handwrite email responses and convert them automatically to text. Use your stylus as a laser pointer when presenting. Color your content and erase your mistakes with ease. OneNote and Lync represent the first new Windows 8 style applications for Office. These applications are designed to deliver touch-first experiences on a tablet. A new radial menu in OneNote makes it easy to access features with your finger. Office Home and Student 2013 RT, which contains new versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote applications, will be included on ARM-based Windows 8 devices, including Microsoft Surface.
Some of the main highlights of the new Office include:
Download Preview from here
Microsoft Office Customer Preview
Microsoft Corp. CEO Steve Ballmer unveiled the customer preview of the new Microsoft Office, optimised for the Windows 8 and touch-based devices like tablets. The next release features an intuitive design that works beautifully with touch, stylus, mouse or keyboard across new Windows devices, including tablets. The new Office is social and unlocks modern scenarios in reading, note-taking, meetings and communications and will be delivered to subscribers through a cloud service that is always up to date. Unlike the earlier versions of Office, the new one is tied into a subscription service of Office 365 and depending on the version you pick, you'll be able to download 'apps' like Word, Excel, etc on a limited number of PCs using a single licence. While pricing details will be announced at the time of launch, here are the three subscription models you can opt for:
- Office 365 Home Premium — designed for families and consumers. This service also includes an additional 20 GB of SkyDrive storage and 60 minutes of Skype world minutes per month.
- Office 365 Small Business Premium — designed for small businesses. This service also includes business-grade email, shared calendars, website tools and HD webconferencing.
- Office 365 ProPlus — designed for enterprise customers who want advanced business capabilities and the flexibility to deploy and manage in the cloud.
“We are taking bold steps at Microsoft,” Ballmer said at the press conference in San Francisco. “The new, modern Office will deliver unparalleled productivity and flexibility for both consumers and business customers. It is a cloud service and will fully light-up when paired with Windows 8.” Office responds to touch as naturally as it does to keyboard and mouse. Swipe your finger across the screen or pinch and zoom to read your documents and presentations. Author new content and access features with the touch of a finger. You can use a stylus to create content, take notes and access features. Handwrite email responses and convert them automatically to text. Use your stylus as a laser pointer when presenting. Color your content and erase your mistakes with ease. OneNote and Lync represent the first new Windows 8 style applications for Office. These applications are designed to deliver touch-first experiences on a tablet. A new radial menu in OneNote makes it easy to access features with your finger. Office Home and Student 2013 RT, which contains new versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote applications, will be included on ARM-based Windows 8 devices, including Microsoft Surface.
Some of the main highlights of the new Office include:
- SkyDrive - Office saves documents to SkyDrive by default, so your content is always available across your tablet, PC and phone. Your documents are also available offline and sync when you reconnect.
- Roaming - Once signed in to Office, your personalized settings, including your most recently used files, templates and even your custom dictionary, roam with you across virtually all of your devices. Office even remembers where you last left off and brings you right back to that spot in a single click.
- Office on Demand - With a subscription, you can access Office even when you are away from your PC by streaming full-featured applications to an Internet-connected Windows-based PC.
- New subscription services - The new Office is available as a cloud-based subscription service. As subscribers, consumers automatically get future upgrades in addition to exciting cloud services including Skype world minutes and extra SkyDrive storage. Subscribers receive multiple installs for everyone in the family and across their devices.
- Yammer - Yammer delivers a secure, private social network for businesses. You can sign up for free and begin using social networking instantly. Yammer offers integration with SharePoint and Microsoft Dynamics.
- Stay connected - Follow people, teams, documents and sites in SharePoint. View and embed pictures, videos and Office content in your activity feeds to stay current and update your colleagues.
- People Card - Have an integrated view of your contacts everywhere in Office. The People Card includes presence information complete with pictures, status updates, contact information and activity feeds from Facebook and LinkedIn accounts.
- Skype - The new Office comes with Skype. When you subscribe, you get 60 minutes of Skype world minutes every month. Integrate Skype contacts into Lync and call or instant message anyone on Skype.
- Digital note-taking - Keep your notes handy in the cloud and across multiple devices with OneNote. Use what feels most natural to you — take notes with touch, pen or keyboard, or use them together and switch easily back and forth.
- Reading and markup - The Read Mode in Word provides a modern and easy-to-navigate reading experience that automatically adjusts for large and small screens. Zoom in and out of content, stream videos within documents, view revision marks and use touch to turn pages.
- Meetings - PowerPoint features a new Presenter View that privately shows your current and upcoming slides, presentation time, and speaker notes in a single glance. While presenting, you can zoom, mark up and navigate your slides with touch and stylus. Lync includes multiparty HD video with presentations, shared OneNote notebooks and a virtual whiteboard for collaborative brainstorming.
- Eighty-two-inch touch-enabled displays - Conduct more engaging meetings, presentations and lessons, whether in person or virtually, with these multitouch and stylus-enabled displays from Perceptive Pixel.
Download Preview from here
Microsoft Office Customer Preview
[h=1]“An expert is one who knows more and more about less and less until he knows absolutely everything about nothing.” [/h]
Comments
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RomBUS Member Posts: 699 ■■■■□□□□□□Yeah I read about the preview on Engadget. Looks very clean and nice and the new features are pretty cool too.
It seems they are pushing people to this cloud thing a little too much. I mean by default saving to SkyDrive...could be confusing to some at first (which means you would have to register first I am guessing).
They are loving the tablets as well -
tpatt100 Member Posts: 2,991 ■■■■■■■■■□I like how they are adding multiple home PC access license.To be honest though I only do light office software type stuff at home and Google Docs works fine for my wife and I. If I was a full time student I would probably use this.
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NetworkingStudent Member Posts: 1,407 ■■■■■■■■□□This was a surprise, I am still getting to know 2010 :P better.
nlike the earlier versions of Office, the new one is tied into a subscription service of Office 365 and depending on the version you pick, you'll be able to download 'apps' like Word, Excel, etc on a limited number of PCs using a single licence. While pricing details will be announced at the time of launch, here are the three subscription models you can opt for:- Office 365 Home Premium — designed for families and consumers. This service also includes an additional 20 GB of SkyDrive storage and 60
This post pretty much spelled out my definition of the cloud….
Cloud=Selling services and subscriptions.
Image buying a copy Office 2013, and then paying $20.00 a month to use. Call me crazy, but I think this is what they’re doing.
Well most of the Office 2010 versions have Extended Support until 2020, so I don't see anyone jumping to the new Office
Microsoft Support LifecycleWhen one door closes, another opens; but we often look so long and so regretfully upon the closed door that we do not see the one which has opened."
--Alexander Graham Bell,
American inventor -
cyberguypr Mod Posts: 6,928 ModAlso Project Server, Sharepoint and Lync 2013. Consolidated list of evals available here: Technet Evaluation Center
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NinjaBoy Member Posts: 968So far I'm not a big fan of Office 2013 so far and I'm not sure how deployable or usable it'll be for the business user... But we'll see...
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Tackle Member Posts: 534So far I'm not a big fan of Office 2013 so far and I'm not sure how deployable or usable it'll be for the business user... But we'll see...
What would prevent it from being usable by the business user? - Honest question, I haven't tried it yet. I'm downloading the 2013 professional plus right now. -
demonfurbie Member Posts: 1,819 ■■■■■□□□□□i wont be using any office that cloud based at work, privacy issues
for home i use google docs ... ive done almost all my wgu work with it or open office and it works finewgu undergrad: done ... woot!!
WGU MS IT Management: done ... double woot :cheers: -
pumbaa_g Member Posts: 353I have a feeling that a lot of people will get burnt out getting certified if MS doesn't slow things down a bit. I mean come on Enterprises have not switched to Exchange 2010 yet, people still adopting Office 2010 and Lync. I am starting to get nightmares about getting certified and then finding out that its obsolete![h=1]“An expert is one who knows more and more about less and less until he knows absolutely everything about nothing.” [/h]
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N2IT Inactive Imported Users Posts: 7,483 ■■■■■■■■■■Interesting thread thanks for calling this info out.
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NinjaBoy Member Posts: 968What would prevent it from being usable by the business user? - Honest question, I haven't tried it yet. I'm downloading the 2013 professional plus right now.
I've only played around with it for 5 mins (due to work loads ), but I've had to sign into my Live account, default save is skydrive, the user interface is, imo, so different - this will throw alot of the non-technical people off.
Granted alot of these things can be ironed out with training and time, and lets face it the beta release is the home version.
However I haven't tested what happens if the internet goes down, if I can use the fully software suite if I don't log onto live, etc... :S -
Devilry Member Posts: 668other than GUI, I don't see too much a problem with it. Looks like it could be a decent platform.
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Xcluziv Member Posts: 513 ■■■■□□□□□□I watched the press conference and it was quite interesting. Also, I was impressed at the social aspect they are focusing on now, ecspecially with SharePoint
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jibbajabba Member Posts: 4,317 ■■■■■■■■□□The fact I need to use a live account to even install it and the fact it sits there at "please wait while we connect to you account" for almost an hour now means it can't be used in our organization .... ever ... (due to the former, not necessarily latter).My own knowledge base made public: http://open902.com
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blargoe Member Posts: 4,174 ■■■■■■■■■□jibbajabba wrote: »The fact I need to use a live account to even install it and the fact it sits there at "please wait while we connect to you account" for almost an hour now means it can't be used in our organization .... ever ... (due to the former, not necessarily latter).
I wonder if the live account requirement is due to it being a customer preview or whatever... I can't see them forcing businesses to go through all that garbage just to install the product. I hope not anyway.IT guy since 12/00
Recent: 11/2019 - RHCSA (RHEL 7); 2/2019 - Updated VCP to 6.5 (just a few days before VMware discontinued the re-cert policy...)
Working on: RHCE/Ansible
Future: Probably continued Red Hat Immersion, Possibly VCAP Design, or maybe a completely different path. Depends on job demands... -
jibbajabba Member Posts: 4,317 ■■■■■■■■□□I hope not anyway.
With DELEVOPERSDEVELOPERSDEVELOPERS on the CEO chair - anything is possible..My own knowledge base made public: http://open902.com