Friday 10 February 2012

Microsoft Office 2012 Beta Slated for Summer, Time to Move to Office 2010

Microsoft has launched the community technical preview (CTP) for Office 2012 to a limited audience, with a public beta planned for summer of 2012. With what will likely end up being Office 2013 looming on the horizon, it’s time for those still using Office 2007 to migrate to Office 2010.
At this point, we know very little about what Office 2012 will bring to the table. A post on Microsoft’s Office Exec blog by PJ Hough, CVP of development for Microsoft Office, declares, “At this early point in our development cycle, I’m not able to share too much about Office 2012, but I can tell you Office 2012 is the most ambitious undertaking yet for the Office Division.”
What we do know is that Windows 8 is imminent, and that Windows 8 is built on a new Metro interface, and will run on tablets including those built on ARM processors. My PCWorld peer Jared Newman points out, “Office 2012 is also expected to have some Metro-style enhancements for Windows 8 tablets, but Microsoft hasn’t commented on that, nor has the company said whether Office 2012 will support Windows 8 on ARM devices.”
In my opinion, the shroud of secrecy may work for Apple, but Microsoft should be more open and revealing with details. The leaks and speculation offer very little useful insight. Organizations around the world that are still using Office 2007 or older versions, and are considering upgrading to a new version of Office need to have the information necessary to decide whether it makes sense to hold out for Office 2012, or just pull the trigger now and switch to Office 2010 (or Office 2011 on Mac OS X).
Throughout its existence, though, organizations have been perpetually behind the curve when it comes to Microsoft Office. There is always some sort of viewer tool for those with legacy versions to be able to open and view newer file formats, and options within Office to revert to older file formats when working with customers or partners that still rely on some previous version of Office.
For some it is a matter of incentive. If Microsoft Office is already meeting their needs, and the new version doesn’t have any new capabilities that make a compelling case for upgrading, there is no reason to bother. For others it is a matter of stability, and opting for a time-tested version rather than volunteering to real-world beta test the bleeding edge version.
We know the next version of Office is coming. It may be called Office 2013, or it may be Office 15, or Microsoft could shake things up with an entirely new naming scheme. We don’t know what features or functionality it will have, but it will soon be here which means that your current legacy version of Microsoft Office will be one step closer to the grave.
The Office 2012 CTP is your wake up call that it is time to seriously consider getting off of Office 2003 or Office 2007, and at least catch up to Office 2010 to make sure you can continue to work smoothly with customers and partners that do make the switch to Office 2012.

Friday 3 February 2012

First Look Microsoft Office 2012 with Full Screenshot

Microsoft Office 2012 Build 15 icons look

Microsoft Office 2012 Word Screenshots


Microsoft Office 2012 PowerPoint Screenshots


Microsoft Office 2012 Excel Sheet Screenshots

 Microsoft Office 2012 Access Screenshots

 Microsoft Office 2012 Publisher Screenshots

 Microsoft Office 2012 OneNote Screenshot

Microsoft Office 2012 Visio Screenshot


source:-http://www.techfeb.com/2011/06/microsoft-office-2012-first-look-with-full-screenshot/

Thursday 2 February 2012

Microsoft to release Office 2012 Beta in January

Microsoft’s next-gen productivity suite, codenamed Office 15, may be getting a beta release in January of 2012. Citing sources familiar with the situation, WinRumors says that the software giant is preparing a milestone for the full beta to be available in late January. A Technology Preview version of the software will likely be distributed alongside the Windows 8 beta at CES 2012.


Office 15 will have a brand new look and more touch-friendly interface. Since Windows 8 will work on both desktop PCs and touchscreen tablets, its important that Office 15 can work well by touch, pen, or mouse. The Metro UI and tile-based elements of Windows 8 for tablets interface will be integrated for easier navigation, including the introduction of a new “Moorea” application that acts like a landing screen with tiles of content for easier navigation and access to your documents.
It’s not clear how fully revamped for the Metro UI the new Office suite will be, since the company initially suggested that it would retain the traditional UI for the best of both worlds. However, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer did reveal back in September that they were definitely considering “to do Office Metro style.”

Wednesday 30 November 2011

Office 2012: What we're expecting to see

Office 2012: What we're expecting to see


OneNote



Office 15 will be here next year. And, what's more, it'll be getting the Windows 8 look. 
There will also possibly be a Windows 8 authoring tool as well as HTML add-ins too. 
So what are we expecting to see in Office 15?





What will Office 15 be called?


Microsoft's PR team refers to "Wave 15" without giving any details (like "Wave 15 is currently under development, but we have nothing further to share at this time"). Several Microsoft job adverts and LinkedIn profiles for Microsoft employees use the name Office 15, and the Access team has referred to Access 15 - but Office 15 is unlikely to be the final name (Office 2010 had the Office 14 codename). 

Although a discussion about SharePoint by what appears to be a Microsoft employee refers to Office 2013, the name is almost certainly going to be Office 2012. As usual, we're expecting multiple Office 2012 versions from starter to home and small business versions as well as a full Office 2012 enterprise edition, with different combinations of apps.

When is the Office 2012 release date?


A job advert for Office Mobile testing in October 2010 referred to "Office 15 and Windows Phone 8 planning phase just getting under way", rumours in March suggested the code had already reached Milestone 2 and what looks like a legitimate build leaked in May. The Office division takes two to three years to put out a new version and we saw the beta of Office 2010 in February 2010 followed by RTM in May. 

Microsoft names products by the year after the financial year they come out in (so they don't look out of date immediately), but Microsoft's financial year ends in July – so anything that releases to manufacturing after July 2012 would have 2013 in the name. Office 2012 beta will probably show up early in the year again, with final code by the middle of 2012 and the actual Office 2012 release date would be before late summer.

Office 2012 features


"Office 15 is shaping up to be one of the most feature packed and exciting releases," says a Microsoft job advert. There's obviously noting official on the Office 2012 features at this stage but there are some hints, like Office president Kurt delBene saying at the Worldwide Partner Conference "We want to remain the leaders in productivity on the desktop. We need to push forward in new scenarios that we had not delivered before."
CLEAN LOOK: The OneNote 15 interface is sparser and easier to navigate on a tablet


There's going to be more video (both editing and using for meetings), more social network integration and maybe a whole new experience for meetings tying together the invitation you send in Outlook, the presentation you give in PowerPoint, the notes you take in OneNote and the Lync client you use for the online meeting.

Office 2012 interface


The Office 2012 interface is going to change from what we've seen in the leaked builds so far, but we'd bet anything you like that it's not going to lose the Office ribbon. OneNote 15 already has a new look in the leaked build with a much cleaner interface that will work well on tablet PCs, and a quick thumbnail navigation to get to recent pages that also looks tablet friendly. 

PowerPoint 15 doesn't have any new themes, which reports from WPC mentioned, but it does preview themes straight from Office.com; it also has a new random transition option. A new M1 tab on the ribbon (probably a reference to new features in the Milestone 1 build) has a Data Grid tool that opens a redesigned version of the Chart picker with a new combo chart type. The same tab is in Word 15, along with an Extensions dropdown; there's nothing on it but it's where the new programming model we've been hearing about fits in.


CLOUD LINKS: No new transitions in the PowerPoint 15 leak but note how you can see themes 
directly from Office.com




Outlook shows the most interface differences, with a cleaner look that has more white space and resembles the Outlook Web App you get with Exchange and Office 365 - but again it keeps the ribbon. Instead of the vertical stack of buttons in the current interface there are Mail, Calendar and Contacts buttons at the bottom to switch to those views - and a menu with the familiar icons for Tasks, Folders and Shortcuts which lets you add them at the bottom as well. 

 

METRO LOOK: More white space like Outlook Web App in Office 365, but the notifications and bottom buttons are very Windows 8




This has hints of the Metro style underlying the Windows Phone 7 and Windows 8 interfaces, especially with the notification icon for new messages and tasks. The M1 command here is for sorting subfolders alphabetically rather than keeping them in the hierarchy you created.

Office 2012 collaboration


The co-authoring features in Word and the Word Web App show up in small changes to the change tracking, making it easier to filter by who made changes or when changes were made. That's part of what Word program manager Jonathan Bailor was promising when Office 2010 came out. "

In Office 15, we'd love to take collaboration and communication to the next level. We've unlocked all of these new ways to work and a new set of expectations from users, and we're like, "Put us back in the ring; we're ready for round two." Until coauthoring a document is as easy and ubiquitous as e-mail attachments, our job isn't done."


One hope is that Office 15 might deal with some long-standing issues in Office, thanks to an intern who worked on improving search features on Office.com and built a tool so the Office developers could look at what people are searching for and "leverage the data in Office '15' planning".

Is there a new app in Office 2012?


Maybe but it isn't Limestone; that's the same internal testing tool we saw in Office 2010 builds. The leaked build includes a new program called Moorea (there isn't a shortcut for it on the Start menu but you can run it anyway). 

WINDOWS 8 LOOK: The new Moorea app lets you place images, text and links to Word documents on a tiled layout that's very Metro


This lets you create layouts with images, text and links to Word documents, on a widescreen grid of tiles; it looks ideal for packaging up content into a Windows 8 tablet layout and we think it might be a tablet authoring tool – the files it saves are HTML…

Is Office 2012 based on HTML?

No. There's Moorea, which looks like a nice way to build HTML interfaces for content, and there's a new application model for developers creating tools on top of Office using JavaScript and HTML (although Visual Basic and C# are still there). A Microsoft job advert explains "Integration of JavaScript/HTML5 will enable developers to create rich applications that span clients and server, integrate with Office 365, enhance the SharePoint experience, and unlock new scenarios that unleash the great potential that lies in the combination of Office and the cloud." One theory; developers might be able to create add-ins for Office that would also work with the Office Web Apps.

Office 2012 Release Date

Microsoft Office 2012 RTM Release Date

RTM: Monday, July 2, 2012
Mainstream Support: Monday, July 2, 2012 – Friday, June 30, 2017
Extended Support: Monday, July 3, 2017 – Tuesday, July 5, 2022