Microsoft Office 2010 and Web Applications New Features Demo Preview Videos
People who has registered to be on the waitlist of Office 2010 Technical Preview Program (TPP) should start to check the Inbox from now on, as Microsoft has announced that Microsoft Office 2010, Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010, Microsoft Visio 2010 and Microsoft Project 2010 have reached the technical preview engineering milestone, which may be the leaked Office 2010 Mondo Technical Preview Beta 1 v14.0.4302.1000.
According to Microsoft press release, invitation will start to be to tens of thousands of people who will be invited to use and has an early peek into Office and Visio programs as part of the Technical Preview program, starting from July 13, 2009. Those who sure to be able to participate in the Office 2010 Technical Preview Program are all Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference (WPC 2009) attendees.
With Office 2010 scheduled to go live and generally available for retail in the first half of 2010, the Office 2010 homepage has also gone live and online at http://www.microsoft.com/Office2010 or http://www.microsoft.com/office/2010/.
There are various videos that preview and demonstrate various Office 2010 applications, such as Word 2010, Excel 2010, PowerPoint 2010, Outlook 2010, OneNote 2010, Publisher 2010, Access 2010, SharePoint Workspace 2010, Office Web Applications and Office Mobile. These video clips provide insight into new features that been added into Office 2010 and upcoming highly anticipated Office Web Applications, an online version of Office 2010. The videos are embedded below.
See What’s New in Microsoft Office 2010
See What’s New in Microsoft Word 2010
See What’s New in Microsoft Excel 2010
See What’s New in Microsoft PowerPoint 2010
See What’s New in Microsoft Outlook 2010
See What’s New in Microsoft OneNote 2010
See What’s New in Microsoft Publisher 2010
See What’s New in Microsoft Access 2010
See What’s New in Microsoft SharePoint Workspace 2010 (Formerly Microsoft Office Groove)
See What’s New in Microsoft Web Applications 2010
See What’s New in Microsoft Mobile 2010
Note: If you encounter “Sorry an error occured” when viewing video, just keep refreshing.
Unfortunately, Office Web applications, which comprised of Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote, won’t be available until a later date. Some analysts have speculated that Office web applications will eventually go live on office.com, a domain that sets to change ownership on August 1, 2009.
Good news is that Office Web applications will be available for free with no cost through Windows Live with support of mobile devices (Office Mobile 2010 may be required), while all Office volume licensing customers including more than 90 million Office annuity customers will have on-premises access to Office Web applications. Other channel of access is via Microsoft Online Services, where customers will be able to purchase a subscription as part of a hosted offering.
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November 9th, 2009 09:28
Nothing beneficial for most businesses – no reason to upgrade/purchase –
Like Vista – all bling – no function.
If they wanted to improve Office they SHOULD have -
1. Made outlook open multiple e-mail accounts as full exchange -not an additional mailbox with some functionality or pop/imap with very limited functionality but two seperate exchange profiles simultaneously from multiple exchange servers.
2. Full OLE support for pictures in access – umm wasn’t that functional with Office XP – why take that out? Why should someone have to code to add pictures to a personal database? Might was well use oracle or a real database if you are going to have to use code. Adding Office XP photo editor is the work around but why not just add photo editor back into office if that is the solution?
3. Offer the old menu bar for people (most of my clients) who don’t want to learn the new menu bar. You can finally modify the ribbon to some extent in 2010 however my clients just want their old ribbon bar. Frankly I have no issue with the new menu bar but I’m one person and most of my clients don’t like it so prefer to stick with office 2003. MS could make money selling the new version if they just offered the old menu as a choice with the new ribbon.