Microsoft Office 2016 (codenamed Office
16) is a version of the Microsoft Office productivity suite, succeeding
both Office 2013 and Office for Mac 2011. It was released on OS X
on 9 July 2015 for Office 365 subscribers. The perpetually licensed
version on OS X and Windows was released on 22 September 2015.
It is Microsoft's most successful
product, but has been stuck in a 90s-era time warp. There are now shinier, more
modern ways to get work done, such as Slack, Google Apps and Trello.
What those sexier apps have in
common is that they let people get work done in a more 21st century way, with
collaboration in mind. People can simultaneously edit documents, share work
without an endless sea of attachments and quickly send group messages.
Microsoft is trying to turn that
conversation on its head with Office 2016, which launched Tuesday.
It makes some subtle but important
tweaks that make it much easier to share, collaborate -- and, yes --
simultaneously edit documents (finally!) in Word.
At first glance, you won't notice
much of a change between Office 2013 and Office 2016. What stands out
immediately are some bolder colors and a search bar placed at the top of the
various apps.
In Microsoft Office 2016 you can
simultaneously edit documents in Word -- finally!
The changes are there, though.
There's a persistent "share" button at the top right of the app. You
can Skype with coworkers from within Word, Excel and PowerPoint. You can set up
group conversations in Outlook and work together as a team on documents saved
in Microsoft's OneDrive cloud storage.
"This is a huge release for us,
even though the user interface has largely stayed the same," Jared
Spataro, Microsoft's general manager for Office, told CNNMoney. "We've
made the transition from 'me work' to 'we work.'"
Office has actually had a lot of
these capabilities for some time. They just have been buried in the background,
because Microsoft has been tepid about scaring off workers who have been using
Office for decades.
Microsoft (MSFT, Tech30) found an elegant way of adding
collaboration features in Office 2016 without radically changing the way people
are accustomed to accomplishing tasks.
For example, when you share a
document in Office 2016, you will open an Outlook email that appears to have a
Word file attached. When the recipient gets the email, it will also show a Word
file icon. But it's not a Word file -- it's a hyperlink to a file located on
OneDrive, enabling both people to make changes to the document without saving
it, renaming it, and reattaching it to another email.
Workers have long treated Office as
a necessary evil. It's the best tool for email, word processing spreadsheets
and presentations -- but it's just horribly unsexy. By making Office more
collaborative, Microsoft is hoping to make its bestselling product cool.
0 comments :
Post a Comment