Powerful tools and smart, yet simple features to help you tackle your busy schedule efficiently, work with others at home or on the road and create reports and presentations that command attention.
The latest release of Microsoft Office includes plenty of interesting enhancements and improvements across all its components. Which in this version, Home and Business, includes Word, Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint and OneNote. Individually there's nothing revolutionary here, but overall this still looks like a worthwhile upgrade.
Word 2010 protects you from macro viruses with its new Protected Mode, for instance, which opens untrusted documents (any you've just downloaded, say) in a sandbox, where malicious code can't interfere with your settings. It's easy to apply a range of visual effects to text, new SmartArt graphics help build impressive diagrams, and you can edit pictures from within Word, no further software required.
Excel 2010 gains several visualisation tools: Sparklines displays small graphs in single cells, while the Slicer helps filter pivot tables to display precisely the data you need. But if you need industrial-strength analytical capabilities, then the new PowerPivot for Excel add-in makes it easy to work with information from many different sources, and can handle datasets with millions of rows.
Outlook 2010 sees revamped navigation everywhere, from the extended ribbon interface to goodies like the Conversation view, which shows you an entire threaded conversation at a click. The new Quick Steps work as simple macros, carrying out multiple Outlook actions at a click. And you're now able to email your calendar to contacts, making it easy for them to fit in with your busy schedule.
Elsewhere, PowerPoint is now able to broadcast presentations across the web. There's support for collaborative working, allowing multiple authors to work on the same Word and PowerPoint documents. And once saved online, you can continue to work on your Office 2010 documents just about anywhere through Microsoft Web Apps, on PCs, laptops or even smartphones.
Please note, the Try Now button will take you to the Microsoft Office Online site. Click the "Try Office 2010 for free" link, create an account if you don't have one already, and you'll be given the download link and product key necessary to activate the trial software.
Review by Mike Williams.