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Tara SeppaApplication Platform Product ManagerMicrosoft Central Eastern Europe

AgendaA Look Back

Demo of Office 2010 Core ApplicationsOutlook

Word

Excel

PowerPoint

OneNote

Demo of Office Web Applications

The Office Backstage

Video of Co-Authoring in Office 2010

Office Live

Office 2007: A Look BackOffice “12” introduced a new way ofworking with Office applications

Top design goalsMake the product easier to use

Help people save time

Make it easier to discover more of thefunctionality people need in Office

Support the creation of great lookingdocuments

Office Challenges

Conventional punditry:“Office is good enough”

“People only use the 10% of the features in Office”

“Everything I need was in Office [95, 97, 2000]”

What customers really tell us:“I’m sure there’s a way to do this, but I can’t figure out how.”

“Office is complex, I would be better at my job if I knew how to use it more.”

Number Of Menu Items

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

Word

1.0

Word

2.0

Word

95

Word

200

0

Word

200

3

Menu Items

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

Wo

rd 1

.0

Wo

rd 1

.1

Wo

rd 2

.0

Wo

rd 6

.0

Wo

rd 9

5

Wo

rd 9

7

Wo

rd 2

00

0

Wo

rd 2

00

2

Wo

rd 2

00

3

Menu Items

Toolbars And Task Panes

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

Wo

rd 1

.0

Wo

rd 1

.1

Wo

rd 2

.0

Wo

rd 6

.0

Wo

rd 9

5

Wo

rd 9

7

Wo

rd 2

00

0

Wo

rd 2

00

2

Wo

rd 2

00

3

Toolbars

Task Panes

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

Wor

d 1.0

Wor

d 1.1

Wor

d 2.0

Wor

d 6.0

Wor

d 95

Wor

d 97

Wor

d 20

00

Wor

d 20

02

Wor

d 20

03

Toolbars

Task Panes

Why A New User Experience?

Menus and Toolbars were designed for less full-featured programs

The feature set of Office had grown andstretched existing UI mechanisms to the limit

It was harder to find functionality than it was a decade ago

“There must be a way to do this…”

“I don’t even know where to start looking…”

So we introduced the ribbon..

Some things we heard:Where is “Save As”?

When is Outlook getting the ribbon?

When is OneNote getting the ribbon?

The answer:OFFICE 2010!

Outlook

Outlook 2010

Ribbon UI

Conversation View

Calendar View within meeting requests

Mail Tips:Alert you of something before you send the email

An out-of-office reply for a person in the To: line\

The size of a distribution list

Word

Word 2010

Navigation Pane

Improved Picture Tools

SmartArt

Co-Authoring

BackOffice

Table Tools

Improved Copy & Paste Functionality

Excel

Excel 2010

Better Data Visualization with:

Sparklines

Slices

Improved Copy & Paste

Insert screenshot

PowerPoint

PowerPoint 2010

Live Preview of Animations

Live Preview of Transitions

Insert Screenshot

Improved Commenting

Co-Authoring

OneNote

OneNote 2010

Ribbon UI

Authoring information

Co-Authoring with SharePoint

OneNote Web Access & OneNote Mobile Access

Question: What is the most used feature in Word, Excel, and PowerPoint?

Answer: Paste

It accounts for:11% of Word feature usage15% of Excel feature usage12% of PowerPoint feature usage

Trivia

Office MobileApplications that are much more than viewers

Microsoft Confidential, Prototype Only

Access your content offline

Zooming options

Create and edit comments

Extending Office to the web

Office Web Applications

Trivia

Question: Which command most often follows Paste?

Answer: Undo

Research for the new user interface for Office

Began to realize that there were two types of features in Office

Flashback: Summer 2003

“In” Features

• Used to change the contents of the document

• The results of the features show up on the printed page

• Bold, Paste, Center, Find, Insert Picture, Spelling, Rotate, AutoSum, Comments, Tables…

“Out” Features

• Used to do something with the whole document

• Not about changing the contents of the document

• Print, Send, Save, Publish, Share, Properties, Document Inspector, Mark as Final, Versions, Workflows…

“In” Features vs. “Out” Features

Almost all of the features were“In” features

WYSIWYG* + Menus/Toolbars optimized for discovery and usage of these features

Word 1 to Office 97 (1989-1999)

*WYSIWYG = “What You See Is What You Get”

Look at the Sheet of Paper

See Something You Want To

Change

Find the Right Tool to Fix the Problem

Use the Tool

See the Results on the Sheet of Paper

WYSIWYG works like this…

Many of the new features are “Out” featuresThe advent of the web

The advent of SharePoint

The advent of collaboration

The advent of unified communication

These features are not well-served by traditional WYSIWYG user interfaces

e.g. Menus, Toolbars, Ribbon

Office in the Present (2000-now)

Look at the Sheet of Paper

See Something You Want To

Change

Find the Right Tool to Fix the Problem

Use the Tool

See the Results on the Sheet of Paper

“Out” features work like this…

Look at the Sheet of Paper

See Something You Want To

Change

Find the Right Tool to Fix the Problem

Use the Tool

See the Results on the Sheet of Paper

“Out” features work like this…

Look at the Sheet of Paper

See Something You Want To

Change

Find the Right Tool to Fix the Problem

Use the Tool

See the Results on the Sheet of Paper

“Out” features work like this…

Look at the Sheet of Paper

See Something You Want To

Change

Find the Right Tool to Fix the Problem

Use the Tool

See the Results on the Sheet of Paper

“Out” features work like this…

Look at the Sheet of Paper

See Something You Want To

Change

Find the Right Tool to Fix the Problem

Use the Tool

See the Results on the Sheet of Paper

“Out” features work like this…

We envisioned two parts to the Office UIThe “InSpace” and the “OutSpace”

The “OutSpace”Shows you everything Office knows about your document

Shows you everything you can do with your document

Fundamentally about taking a step back from the details of your work to see the bigger picture

A new UI for “Out” features

Microsoft Office Backstage

Trivia

Question: What is Bill Gates’s favorite Microsoft product?

Answer: Excel

Summary: Office 2010 Improvements

Ribbon Everywhere: A consistent user experience across Office

Office Web Access

Microsoft Office Backstage

Live Preview Paste Gallery

New Visuals and Themes

http://microsoft.com/technet

Resources for IT Professionals

http://microsoft.com/msdn

Resources for Developers

www.microsoft.com/learning

Microsoft Certification & Training Resources

Resources

Related Content

OFC_208 – What's New In Office 2010

OFC_227 – Social Computing with SharePoint 2010

Track Resources

Resource 1

Resource 2

Resource 3

Resource 4

Complete an

evaluation on

CommNet and

enter to win!

© 2009 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Microsoft, Windows, Windows Vista and other product names are or may be registered trademarks and/or trademarks in the U.S. and/or other countries.The information herein is for informational purposes only and represents the current view of Microsoft Corporation as of the date of this presentation. Because Microsoft must respond to changing market conditions, it should not be interpreted to be a commitment on the part of Microsoft, and Microsoft cannot guarantee the accuracy of any information provided after the date of this presentation. MICROSOFT MAKES NO WARRANTIES, EXPRESS,

IMPLIED OR STATUTORY, AS TO THE INFORMATION IN THIS PRESENTATION.

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