Wednesday, January 30, 2013

★: Microsoft Office 2013 Offline Download | Free Download Office 2013

thumbnail Microsoft Office 2013 Offline Download | Free Download Office 2013
Jan 30th 2013, 14:54









  • Microsoft Word 2013

  • Microsoft Access 2013

  • Microsoft Excel 2013

  • Microsoft InfoPath 2013

  • Microsoft Office Professional Plus 2013

  • Microsoft Office Standard 2013

  • Microsoft OneNote 2013

  • Microsoft Outlook 2013

  • Microsoft PowerPoint 2013

  • Microsoft Project Professional 2013

  • Microsoft Project Standard 2013

  • Microsoft Publisher 2013

  • Microsoft SharePoint Workspace 2013

  • Microsoft Visio 2013





New user interface

The Office 2013 user interface isn't markedly different from the one in Office 2010: The ribbon remains front and centre, though the text and the icons inside it are a bit larger and are spaced farther apart. These changes take better advantage of large monitors and touchscreen displays. Nevertheless, the ribbon isn't too big for an average laptop display, even with the addition of two new tabs: Design and Developer (actually, the Developer tab is present in Office 2010, but it's hidden by default).
Though I've used a number of all-in-one computers with touchscreens over the past few years, I don't use the touch interface very often. Perhaps I'm just a creature of habit, but it doesn't feel natural to take my fingers off the mouse to stab them at icons on the screen (or maybe my fingers are just too fat to be accurate). In any event, though I tried hard to use the ribbon with my finger, I kept returning to the mouse. The UI delivers more benefits on tablet platforms, but it doesn't feel any less natural when used with a mouse.

New Word features


Microsoft has made a number of cool, interesting, and very useful improvements to Word 2013. On the usefulness front, you can now import a PDF directly into Word, edit it as a Word doc, and then save it as either a Word doc or a PDF. Not only do imported files retain all of the original documents' formatting - including headers, columns, and footnotes - but elements such as tables and graphics can be edited in Word as such.
Import a PDF file containing a table, for example, and you can edit the table just as though you had created it in Word from scratch. You can also embed a PDF file in a Word doc.
Another cool feature is the ability to connect to online resources and bring them inside your documents. For example, you can use Bing to search the web for videos, without leaving Word, and then embed the HTML code for that video in your document.
Link your SkyDrive account to your Flickr account, and you can jump to your online photo collection and embed photos directly in the document - again, without ever leaving Word.
Embedding a screenshot from an app running on your PC is even easier: Click Insert > Screenshot, and a window with thumbnails of every window open on your desktop will become visible. Click the image you want, and it will appear wherever your cursor is.
When you embed an image or a video in a document, you can grab that element and move it around the document and watch as your text automatically reflows around it in real time.

Word collaboration features


When you're collaborating with other people on a document, being able to track the changes that each person makes is critical. This becomes much easier to do in Word 2013, thanks to a new feature called simple markup view.
A red vertical line in the left margin indicates that changes have been made to the document, while a word balloon in the right margin indicates the presence of a comment. Click on the vertical line to reveal both the edit changes and the comments; click on the word balloon to show just the comments.
Microsoft has also added a new viewing mode, called Reader. When you view a document in this mode, each paragraph has a small triangle in front of it. Click the triangle after you've finished reading its associated paragraph, and the paragraph will collapse so that more text will appear, without your having to scroll to another page.
I haven't had time to explore every new feature of Word 2013, but I like what I've seen so far. It looks as though Microsoft has significantly improved the application, adding some great new features without mucking anything else up in the process. Nevertheless, my opinion at this stage is based on very limited time with the product.

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