Sunday, 5 February 2012

Microsoft Office 15 Reaches Technical Preview Milestone

by Saumitra Bhagwat on 1/31/2012 3:40:00 AM
Posted in Microsoft , Software , Windows

Apart from a few screenshots leaked early last year, not much was known about the next major release of Microsoft Office codenamed “Office 15”. However, as of yesterday, Microsoft has announced that "Office 15" has entered into Technical Preview, with the public beta slated for a summer release.

The technical preview is currently open only to a select few outside Microsoft under a non-disclosure agreement.  Last time around, prior to the launch of Office 2010, people had a chance to sign up for the technical preview. However, this time, Microsoft seems to have taken a less public approach for choosing potential candidates for the technical preview.

In any case, the technical preview means the suite should most-likely be feature complete and relatively stable to let end-users try it out. Details on what’s new are scarce right now, but it could be fair game to expect some Metro-esque updates to the UI, aligning the user experience with other products such as the Xbox Dashboard and Windows 8.

Microsoft is calling "Office 15" as one of the most ambitious undertakings for the Office division, promising a simultaneous update to all its Office products and services across all platforms for the first time ever.  

Either way, it should be interesting to see what new features and enhancements make their way into Office 15. Personally, I would like to see deeper integration with Microsoft’s cloud services such as Office 365 and Skydrive, allowing for easier sharing and collaboration.

Office 2010 brought to the table several new features such as the controversial Backstage View, a consistent Ribbon UI across the suite, and lots of minor enhancements in every app. However, it was by no means a must have upgrade. I guess we’ll have to wait for the public beta to see if "Office 15" fits that bill.

Source: MS Office Blog

Print This Article 18 Comments View All Comments Post a Comment I bet this isn't.. by piroroadkill on Tuesday, January 31, 2012 Going to be all that great compared to 2010. Could be, but I'm betting on being a metro-style version of Office, for Windows 8, and then basically Office 2010 style for Windows 7, maybe with a few metro-ish looking UI elements.

Seriously, the feature set of 2010 is already ridiculous.. piroroadkill Reply RE: I bet this isn't.. by retrospooty on Tuesday, January 31, 2012 LOL. ya, I cant think of a thing I use that cant be done in Office 2003.

Not knocking the app, its great. Its just that it was great a decade ago. retrospooty Reply RE: I bet this isn't.. by apinkel on Tuesday, January 31, 2012 The excel 65536 row limitation alone made office 2007 a must have upgrade. I also much prefer the ribbon UI to digging thru ump-teen million sub menus. I can actually find stuff now. 2007 was a must have for me... I can take or leave 2010.

And, cloud integration is the big one for me. But since I'm currently a dropbox user, an android user as well as a windows user I really wonder if MS is going to come up with a solution that is flexible enough for me. apinkel Reply RE: RE: I bet this isn't.. by Akrovah on Tuesday, January 31, 2012 Exactly. I work in the HR department of a 70,000+ employee organization. Out roster alone was too much for Excel 2003, not counting reports of leave accruals, payments made, etc.

And then on a more personnal level I was taking some physics courses at about the time Office 2007 was release, and these courses required embedding complex formulas into Word documents, and the improvements tot he formula editor alone in Word 2007 over 2003 sold me on that as well. Not to mention the ability to copy Excel graphs into a word document and still have the ability to modify them as if they were still in Excel (thanks to the xml coding behind them now) whereas in 2003 it basically just copied a picture of the graph.

Oh yeah. Office 2007 was just Window dressing /eyeroll. Akrovah Reply RE: I bet this isn't.. by dawza on Tuesday, January 31, 2012 There are things 07 is far better suited for, and I really can't think of any downsides. The ribbon is superior once you get used to it, the xml base offers far more cross-application usability, and the enhancements to Excel alone are worth the upgrade. That said, I agree that for many users, these benefits my not be readily apparent. But dig in a bit and you may be pleasantly surprised.

I wish we could do away with 2003 altogether so I wouldn't have to design spreadsheets in 03 to ensure backwards compatibility. dawza Reply RE: I bet this isn't.. by Murloc on Tuesday, January 31, 2012 Equation editor is a whole new world in Office 2007 or superior.

It's not an external plug-in, it's directly in the file.
It supports formatting much better.
You can use endless commands like \matrix(@@) or \sqrt (n&x) to write equations.

I successfully keep up with the math teacher who's writing on the board with Word 2007.
With my usage, from 2007 to 2010 I saw only a few useful tweaks but nothing revolutionary.
From 2003 to 2007 it's a revolution and a huge increase in productivity. Murloc Reply RE: I bet this isn't.. by Penti on Wednesday, February 01, 2012 They won't drop the Ribbon UI, the WinRT framework is a whole different runtime that they won't port to. Simple as that. Win 8 means continue to develop the Ribbon UI and other desktop APIs. Which of course means that there won't be any Office (built on Office/MSO at least) for ARM based Windows tablets. Penti Reply Value by Egglick on Tuesday, January 31, 2012 Now, if they were to get rid of that stupid ribbon interface and only charge $15, it might be worth a second thought over OpenOffice. Still using '03 at work, and I'm gonna ride that out as long as I can. Egglick Reply RE: Value by evilspoons on Tuesday, January 31, 2012 Ribbon's here to stay, buddy... it's even in Windows 8's file explorer.

Why? Oh yeah, because it's better. I got used to it in a month after Office 2007 hit and I've never looked back. evilspoons Reply Office main competitor, like all MS products, is old versions by lurker22 on Tuesday, January 31, 2012 As stated above, old versions already do everything people want. They are just doing window dressing for the last two versions. I still use Office 2003,and if it stopped working would just switch to something free rather than spend big $ for all these features I don't need. lurker22 Reply Subject Comment Post Comment Please login or register to post a comment.
User Name Password Remember me? Login 1 2 Next » View All Comments Post a Comment Follow AnandTech
Latest from AnandTech Pipeline Submit News! Apple Releases OS X 10.7.3, Safari 5.1.3 US Cellular Announces Initial 4G LTE Markets, Devices AMD Radeon HD 7950 Launch Recap Apple Updates Final Cut Pro X, Brings Back Features from Final Cut Pro 7 Firefox 10 Releases Today, Fixes Add-On Compatibility Issues Microsoft Makes Changes to Windows 8's File Management Changes Motorola Announces RAZR XT910 Developer Edition with Unlocked Bootloader Apple Updates AirPort Utility, AirPort Base Station Firmware - Adds iCloud Remote Access Samsung Announces Galaxy S Advance Intel Releases Seven Sandy Bridge CPUs Snapdragon S4 “Krait” – MSM8960 GPU Benchmark Surfaces DailyTech Sources: Apple is Building New ARM SoC In-House, Possibly for iPad 3 Facebook $5B IPO Apocalypse Kicks Off 2/1/2012 Daily Hardware Reviews Brain Activity Decoded To Produce Words, Could Produce Method of Mind-Reading Whoever Wins, We're Winning Too: ARM Holdings Posts Record Earnings Nikon Launches New Range of Digital Cameras Microsoft Takes a Swipe at Google Privacy With Newspaper Ads Amazon Profit Drops in Q4 2011 Earnings Report Sony Announces Kazuo Hirai as New CEO GeForce GTX 580 Slayer: Radeon HD 7950 is Cheaper, Faster Than Its Foe Former GM Vice Chair Bob Lutz Attacks "Right-Wing Media" Over Negative Volt Coverage Exclusive: Marvell Says it Will Find a Home in Chinese Windows Phones 1/31/2012 Daily Hardware Reviews -- Radeon HD 7950 Edition "Angry Birds" Maker Says Piracy Isn't All Bad, Can Generate Business RIM Escapes to Fantasy World, Imagines Superheroes Will Save It... Literally Google Offers Clarification on Privacy Policy Updates 1.0-liter 3-cylinder EcoBoost Launches with UK Market Ford Focus Twitter @PatrickMoorhead that was seriously hilarious @kiddfroster depends on the CPU but it should issue halts/underclock first @techtow should be fixed now :) AT and Forums back up :) @techtow thank you for the heads up! passed it along to our dev @kyhwana moved to a new host, will give everyone the info on where we ended up when the time is right - still working on migration now :) @Patranus just as an option if users don't have good DNS to begin with :) Main site is back up, restoring forums now Migrating servers & datacenters, you'll see some downtime/hiccups while we bring everything back up. @CDemerjian hahahah leave my big nose alone!  

Copyright © 1997-2012 AnandTech, Inc. All rights reserved. Terms, Conditions and Privacy Information.
Click Here for Advertising Information Quantcast

No comments:

Post a Comment