Microsoft Office 2013

Its just amazing how there is always a constant update and changes in most programs.  Sometimes it seems like i just can’t keep up with all these technology updated versions of programs and electronics.  But I know for sure that Microsoft Office 2013 will be very convenient for myself and many users due to the fact that documents could be easily accessible from any device any where.  It will just make everyone’s life easier… Nice!!

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Microsoft Office 2013

Changes in Microsoft Outlook 2013

I have been using Microsoft Outlook as my email application for about 5 years and it has worked great. Here are some new features in Microsoft Outlook 2013:

Look and feel
In its current incarnation, Outlook still looks like, well, Outlook, but you’ll notice that many of the options aren’t immediately visible. Much like there’s no fixed Start button in Windows 8, the flags in Outlook only appear if you hover next to a message with your mouse. Also new with this version: a weather bar stretching across the top of your calendar. You can manually change the location, but by default, Office shows only one set of weather forecasts at a time. Another, more miscellaneous change: if you’ve begun to respond to an email, but saved it as a draft, the word “Draft” will appear in red in your inbox, next to the message (yes, just like Gmail).

Peeks

DNP EMBARGO Microsoft Office 15 Preview details, screenshots and impressions

With this version, the company is also introducing fly-over menus called Peeks, which show things like calendar appointments, to-do items and information about your contacts. To find these, look for the icons stacked on top of each other in the lower left corner of the screen. Mouse over the calendar icon, for instance, and you’ll see a live, pop-up window that allows you to glance at your agenda without having to toggle between tabs to check your schedule. If you’re wide open, you’ll see a message saying you have no appointments; if you are booked, it’ll tell you when.

source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/07/16/microsoft-office-15-preview/

-Yuriy Senyut

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Changes in Microsoft Outlook 2013

My opinion on features of Office 2013

An exciting feature that I came across while reading about the new office 2013 edition is the ability of it to provide a “cloud” service along with its subsricption-fee based office 365. The service allows individuals and small establishments to have the capability to store documents in the cloud on Microsoft’s SkyDrive service and access them with ease.

Blog entry raised by John Avedissian

Source: forwardthinking.pcmag.com

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

What’s New for Excel 2013

One of the many features I enjoy in Excel is their pivot tables and various charts. It is a handy, easy and enjoyable way to view the data. Here are some of the new features in pivot and chart views.

Enjoy new ways to explore your data more intuitively. Visualize, analyze, and display results with a single click. And when you’re ready, it’s easy to share your freshly discovered insights.

Discover:
Reveal the insights hidden in your data. Easily extract what you need from imported information with Flash Fill, and perform complex analyses quickly with Recommended Pivot Table.

Recommended Pivot Table   Excel summarizes your data with previews of various pivot-table options, letting you select the option that tells your story best.

Flash Fill   Here’s the easy way to reformat and rearrange your data. Excel learns and recognizes your pattern and auto-completes the remaining data, with no formulas or macros required.

Recommended Pivot Tables

 

Visualize

New analysis tools help make it easy to visualize data with a click of the mouse.

Recommended Charts

Recommended Charts   Let Excel recommend the charts that best illustrate your data’s patterns. Quickly preview your chart and graph options, and then pick the option that works best.

Quick Analysis   Discover a variety of ways to represent your data visually. When you like what you see, apply formatting, sparklines, charts, and tables with a single click.

Chart Formatting Control   Fine-tune your charts quickly and easily. Change the title, layout, and other chart elements—all from a new and more interactive interface.

Source: http://www.microsoft.com/office/preview/en/excel-2013-preview

Anthony Garafola

Posted in Office 2013 | Comments Off on What’s New for Excel 2013

MS Office 2013

As mentioned before I am someone who has worked in finance and has used excel for a few years now and actually still do. I have used excel 2000, 2003, 20007, 2010, 2011 (MAC) so now with the new 2013 coming out I find it interesting that there will be 5 different trial versions: Home, Small Business (intended for up to 10 users), ProPlus, Enterprise, and Servers.

we know everyone uses it for numbers but I do wonder what the real differences will be in these versions, maybe certain tool bars or less toolbars? cant wait to try it out though I hope there are not many changes. as I am hearing it will be like an app instead of a program but for windows 8. In addition it will be connected to ms apps like sky drive, dkype and other social programs so now when doing business we can interact with our collegues or partners! 2 thumbs up!

Source:
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-505143_162-57478578/try-microsoft-office-2013-beta-today/

Sincerely,

Salman

Posted in Office 2013 | Comments Off on MS Office 2013

How I use Excel at my work

My major is accounting. I think that excel is practically made for accountants. Especailly, it is very useful for bond investment. Excel makes easy to find carrying value of bond, present value, payment, and interest.  Excel has distinct charts and graphs comparing to calculators, so it help us compare and analyze each other easily.

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

New Microsoft Office 2013

 

Alignment Guides– to help you get things exactly where you want them, Word will guides that help you put that picture right at the top-right margin, in the middle of the page, etc. and ensure they stay there.

  • Working with Themes and Styles
    • Design tab – We know that you spend a lot of time making your documents look polished and professional, so your message is presented in the best light possible. The Design tab brings all of the tools needed to create a great-looking document into one place, so you can easily create a unique, beautiful look for each document you create.Screenshot of Word's Design tab
    • Refreshed Text Styles – We also refreshed the default text styles for Word, adding a crisp/clean set of headings that look great and feel modern/fresh.
    • Simple Markup – When groups of people are working on a document together, Track Changes is a commonly used tool to make sure that everyone can see “who changed what when” in the final product. The result of that can be a document that’s hard to read, as all of the tracked revisions make it hard to see what the current state of the document is. Simple markup hides the revisions behind a single red change bar, and lets you show/hide the details by clicking on it. In other words, instead of having to figure out the result of changes that are marked up like this:
      Screenshot of a document with tracked changes in All Markup view
    • http://blogs.office.com/b/microsoft-word/archive/2012/07/30/introducing-word-2013.aspx
    • Jeniffer Suarez
Posted in Office 2013 | Comments Off on New Microsoft Office 2013

Office 2013

I didn’t know Office 2013 is coming before reading the assignment. Our classmate did a good job by posting those articles. I don’t think I can do a better job than experts. So, I just post my opinion to 2 feathers that caught my attention. First, it is a great tool for tablet. It supports screen touch and it is easier to use. But I don’t know how it will affect computer users. The other feather is cloud storage by default. It’s convenient if you have multiple devices. Like yesterday, I did homework partially in computer lab, and I wanted to send to myself via E-mail, so I can make some changes when I get home. However,  after I printed something and came back to the computer, I totally forgot about it. So I have to redo it again. It wouldn’t be a problem using Office 2013. But I also concern about the safety of the data. It makes me uncomfortable to think that I don’t have complete control over the documents I create. But again, it is hard to balance between convenience and information safety. (Huiru Zheng)

Posted in Office 2013 | Comments Off on Office 2013

New Microsoft Office 2013 Features information

8 Things to Know About the New Microsoft Office

Check out this rundown of all the new features you will find in Microsoft’s most ambitious Office upgrade to date.

Steve Ballmer unveiling Microsoft Office 2013

courtesy of company

On Monday in San Francisco, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer unveiled the latest edition of Microsoft Office–the most ambitious release in the productivity software’s history, he said.

Indeed, you might not recognize Word, PowerPoint, and other applications in the Office suite. That’s because they were redesigned to make the most of the Windows 8 operating system, work with mobile devices such as the new Surface tablets Microsoft recently unveiled, and operate in the cloud so you can get access to your files and information regardless of where you are or what machine you’re using.

Ballmer talked about how the company’s flagship product is now focused first on being a service. While Microsoft will continue to provide Office as software you can install on your computer, the new Office was designed primarily as a service in which the applications and most of your files sit in the cloud.

While the company won’t admit it, experts say Microsoft’s next-generation version of Office is one of many moves it is making to fend off the inroads Google is making on the business-software market with Google Apps.

According to The Wall Street Journal, even though Microsoft Office still has more than 90% market share for business-productivity software and more than an 80% share of corporate email, research firm Gartner recently reported that Google is bringing into its fold one-third to half of new corporate users who are paying for Web-based software.

The competition is great for business users–the new Office looks like an ultramodern and massive improvement over the current version. Several things you’ll notice:

Touch modernizes Office apps.

Touch makes using Office apps on your tablet seem markedly more intuitive and simple. Kirk Koenigsbauer, a corporate VP for Microsoft Office, used a tablet to show how swiping, pinching, zooming, and tapping works with applications such as PowerPoint and Word.

No more paper note taking.

The topic of “inking” came up several times during Microsoft’s demo. The new Office lets you use a stylus to do things like handwrite emails and convert them to text, or as a laser pointer when presenting.

PowerPoint on the tablet rocks.

Koenigsbauer said the tablet’s screen is now a “cockpit,” so when you’re giving a PowerPoint presentation, not only can you use your digital pen to mark up slides on the fly, you can also see upcoming slides and notes, as well as a new clock and timer so you don’t go overtime.

Drag and drop makes consuming data and collaborating simple.

Koenigsbauer showed off OneNote and Lync–Windows 8 style applications for Office that are optimized for touch.

OneNote, a digital note-taking app, organizes information such as text, pictures, notes, Web content, lists, and more. You can use the tablet’s camera to snap a picture of a paper advertisement, for example, then crop part of it and drag and drop it into OneNote.

Lync is Microsoft’s unified communications platform integrated into Office, and it includes instant messaging, audio, video, Web conferencing, and location information so you can see where your contacts are. In a multiperson video chat using Lync, you can drag and drop someone from your contact list into the live meeting, drop a PowerPoint presentation onto the shared canvas, draw on the presentation with a touchscreen device, and share OneNote notebooks with others in the call, as well as take and display notes.

Cloud storage is the default.

Although your documents will still be available offline, the new Office saves documents to SkyDrive by default, so you can get at your content regardless of what computer or device you’re using. And once signed in to Office, your personal settings, most recently used files, templates, and custom dictionary show up on whatever machine you’re using.

Microsoft acquired Yammer last month for $1.2 billion, proving that the software giant is serious about social. While Koenigsbauer talked about how people can use Yammer and SharePoint for business social networking, the “People Card” looks particularly useful. For each of your contacts, this card shows you the person’s location, photos, and contact information, as well as status updates from Facebook and LinkedIn.

You can create awesome presentations.

Microsoft’s acquisition of Perceptive Pixel now makes it possible for you to use 82-inch touch- and stylus-enabled displays for meetings and presentations. Koenigsbauer stood in front of a huge screen and used his hand to swipe across tiles of apps that he could access during a presentation. As an example, he tapped on a weather app to pull off an “Al Roker” weatherman-like imitation with the large digital backdrop.

Reference:

http://www.inc.com/christina-desmarais/8-things-you-need-to-know-about-the-new-microsoft-office.html

Student Name: Viviana Loza

Posted in Office 2013 | 1 Comment

New Features of Microsoft Office 2013

Some of the classmates’ posts had already pointed out the major new features of Microsoft 2013, here are a little more base on my research:

1. Touch And Stylus

Office 2013 ventures beyond the mouse and keyboard to embrace touch and pen input. While multi-touch laptops aren’t–and probably won’t be–a mainstream choice for business and home users anytime soon, touch is an essential component of smartphones and tablets, obviously. The pen may be making a comeback too, judging by the popularity of Samsung’s stylus-equipped Galaxy Note.

What kind of touch features does Office 2013 have? The same ones you’ve grown accustomed to using on your phone and tablet: Swipe a finger across the screen to turn a page; pinch and zoom to read documents; and write with a finger or stylus. And when you write an email by hand, Office 2013 automatically converts it to text.

2. A Social Suite

Office 2013’s strong social networking component appears to be targeted mostly at Microsoft’s huge installed base of enterprise users. In addition to Skype, Office now includes Yammer, a secure and private social network for businesses that Microsoft tentatively acquired just last month. Yammer integrates with SharePoint, Redmond’s Web application platform, and Microsoft Dynamics, the company’s line of CRM and enterprise resource planning apps.

Office 2013’s People Card tool provides detailed information about your contacts, including their status updates from Facebook and LinkedIn. Now you’ll know what your clients had for lunch–and perhaps whether they had lunch with your competitors.

3. Big Screen Bonanza

Huge touchscreen displays aren’t necessarily a feature of Office 2013, but the suite’s stylus- and multi-touch-oriented UI enables it to work quite well with enormous LCD panels, such as Perceptive Pixel’s 82-inch monster. PowerPoint presentations, particularly ones with embedded video, are a natural for large touch panels.

Educators may find large touchscreens useful too. A professor, for instance, could use OneNote in the classroom, jotting lecture notes and diagrams directly on a gigantic touchscreen; students could later access the notes via SkyDrive.

 

Reference:

http://www.informationweek.com/software/productivity-applications/microsoft-office-2013-10-best-features/240003864?pgno=11

 

Yuting Peng

Posted in Office 2013 | Comments Off on New Features of Microsoft Office 2013