Hands On: Microsoft Office 2013 and Office 365

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Microsoft today announced the next generation of its Office suite: Microsoft Office 2013, the desktop version, and Office 365, a subscription-based version of the same product that comes with more frequent updates and tight integration with SkyDrive, Microsoft's cloud service for document storage.

The suite includes new versions of Microsoft Word, Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, OneNote, and a few other applications, all of which have been redesigned and, thankfully, look much smarter.

The biggest changes implemented in Office 2013 are that it integrates with SkyDrive and works across a multitude of devices. The new Office works on PCs and tablets running Windows 8, as well as Windows Phones. Microsoft has not yet announced when the software will be available for purchase, nor what it will cost. A Mac version will be available at launch as well, according to company representatives.

PCMag received an early preview copy of Office 365, running on a Samsung Series 7 Slate with the Windows 8 operating system to get a feel for the new apps.

Office 2013 First Impressions
First impressions don't come with second chances, and, luckily for Microsoft, the new Office looks much smarter than its predecessors. All the apps have a more streamlined appearance, particularly because menu bars and other options collapse neatly when you don't need them. Microsoft Word and PowerPoint in particular, go to much greater lengths to help you focus on your text or slides without dozens of distracting buttons that you weren't planning to use anyway.

Fewer color gradations and more right angles (rather than beveled edges) in menu bars also contribute to the modernized look. Outlook looks so drastically different, you might mistake it for Web mail.

Setting up the preview copy of Microsoft Office 365 (again, that's the name of the subscription-based service, while Office 2013 is the locally installed desktop version) requires signing into a Windows Live account, which authenticates the connection between the apps and your SkyDrive account.

SkyDrive is Microsoft's own cloud storage solution, similar in many ways to Google Docs (which is in the process of being expanded and rebranded as Google Drive). With SkyDrive, you can upload documents to your Web account so that you have access to them from any Internet-connected device. And like Google Docs, SkyDrive has Web versions of some common apps, like Word, Excel, and PowerPoint. So if you're on a computer that doesn't have Microsoft Word installed, you can still read and edit your Word documents—provided you've saved them to SkyDrive—as well as create new Word docs.

The 2013 version of Microsoft Office integrates much more tightly with SkyDrive. SkyDrive becomes the default location for saving new files, though you always have the opportunity to override the suggestion and save your files where ever you want. The option to save files locally rather than to SkyDrive is the kind of thing that some Windows users probably just assumed would be the case, but it's quite different than what Apple users have grown to expect. For example, if you use Apple's office apps, such as Pages or Numbers, to create a new document on an iPad, you never once have the ability to choose where to save the file. Apple automatically saves it to your Apple iCloud account (the nearest equivalent of Microsoft's SkyDrive). I was pleasantly surprised to be able to save files wherever I wanted on the Samsung Series 7 Slate tablet running Windows 8. Mac users working on a laptop or desktop have better ability to save files locally, even with the next Mac OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion, though integration with iCloud is still tight there.

For each app, you can customize a subtle graphic design that decorates the upper right corner of the screen—I liked "straws" and "tree rings"—to give your apps a hint of personalization.

As with any long-standing, standard-issue business software, Microsoft Office cannot change too radically from one version to the next. People rely on these apps for business, and too much change can throw off their ability to get work done. Remember the wrath longtime Office users unleashed when Microsoft forced The Ribbon on them? It's critical that Microsoft roll out new features, functionality, and other changes to Office carefully and strategically. With Office 2013 and Office 365, the additions are few but noteworthy, which was the right balance for Microsoft to strike in this release. Here are a few of my favorite new features.

Word 2013
Like an unkempt bachelor who finally shaves and puts on a tie, Word cleans up nicely. The biggest and brightest change to Microsoft Word in 2013 is how spacious it has become. Word—and really all the apps in Office 365—has finally embraced whitespace. The ability to collapse menu bars and create a more focused writing environment is no small improvement. There's an entire subcategory of word-processing applications that cater to people who prefer to write in a distraction-free environment, without menu bars, macros, and other on-screen bells and whistles. Giving Word users this experience is somewhat overdue.

Better yet, a new view option, called Read Mode, sets your document in an entirely distraction-free screen, leaving just the most essential buttons within easy reach at the top. It looks even more courageously sparse than the Full Screen Reading mode in older versions of Word.

But even more monumental than Word's new look is one huge feature: You can now edit PDFs in Word. Yes. You read that correctly. Open a PDF in Microsoft Word, and you can type right into—not on top of—the existing text (see slide 9 in the slideshow). As long as the PDF was created with typed text, you can edit it. This feature doesn't work on PDFs that contain text that was created as an image, however, but the majority of forms and other PDFs that you would want to type on will be supported.

New mark-up tools make editing and reading edited text a little easier, but without making any radical changes to the Track Changes feature set.

Working with images is easier now, too, because you can drag them around and see a preview of how the text wrap changes in real-time. Another improvement on the image front: Word now lets you insert online pictures and videos. That means you can embed a YouTube clip right in your Word document.

PowerPoint 2013

Start up the new PowerPoint 2013, and you're faced with a stockpile of updated themes that you can use to start your presentation. Built-in alignments and smart guides help non-designers keep their sloppiness in check.

When building presentations as a team, PowerPoint now does a much better job of enabling collaborative editing. Save a PPT to the cloud, and you'll be able to send a link to the file, where others can edit it. A new comments pane lets other discuss the work without changing it, too.

Tools that help presenters with the last stage of their jobs look very compelling so far in the preview edition of PowerPoint 2013. I love that the presenter can now zoom in on a diagram, chart, or graphic in the slide on the spot, during the presentation.

Similar to Word 2013, another thing to highlight about PowerPoint 2013 is you can collapsible nearly everything, giving you a much more focused and distraction-free workspace. Better, when you preview your slides in full screen, quick access buttons appear over the images when you move the cursor, letting you quickly get back to work editing when you find you need to change your presentation.

 

Visit page two to read about Excel 2013, Outlook 2013, and more!

 

Copyright © 2010 Ziff Davis Publishing Holdings Inc.

17 Jul, 2012


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