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Monday, June 20, 2011

Transition to Microsoft Office 2010

Our institution will soon be in transition to Microsoft Office 2010, and I have been reading Microsoft TechNet, which mentions that Silverlight as recommended installation to view the following and for use in Office 2010 as a whole:
Learn where menu and toolbar commands are in Office 2010 and related products
“Wondering where your favorite menu and toolbar commands are located in Office 2010? You’ve come to the right place. What do you want to do? Use an interactive guide.”
These pages on TechNet do not require Silverlight:
Although not a scholarly source, this is the article in Wikipedia:
Microsoft Office 2010 - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia “Microsoft Office 2010 (also called Office 2010 and Office 14[3]) is a productivity suite for Microsoft Windows,[4] and the successor to Microsoft Office 2007. Office 2010 includes extended file format support,[5]user interface updates,[6] and a changed user experience.[7][8] A 64-bit version of Office…”
Some videos on YouTube could be helpful:
Microsoft Office 2010 Comparison Screencast ~ Chris Pirillo
“I recently asked all of you to submit your screencasts to me for review. The best of the best will be chosen to be featured here, in my various channels and outlets. This provides content of a different perspective for our community, and gives you new exposure for your work! Jack has submitted…”

Office 2010 beats Office 2007
“Two coworkers, one using Office 2010 and the other Office 2007, compete to complete common tasks. Who comes out ahead?”

Microsoft Office 2007 & 2010: Understanding The Basics
“Microsoft Office is very familiar to teachers. They have confidence using Microsoft OneNote, PowerPoint, Word and other programs. But theres always something...”
This site simply answers what is the difference between Office 2010 and 2007:
Difference Between Microsoft Office 2007 and Office 2010 | Difference Between | Microsoft Office 20...
“Microsoft Office 2007 versus Office 2010 Office 2010 comes with many new and attractive features for both business and home users, but at a price”
I am also reviewing other sites for images:
What’s New Inside Microsoft Office 2010
“This visual guide describes the new features of Microsoft Office 2010. You can download Office 2010 from MSDN /Technet or, if you are not a member, it will be soon be available as a free download on officebeta.microsoft.com.”

[PDF] The Differences Between Microsoft Office 2010 and Microsoft Office ...

Microsoft Office 2010 highlights
“The Office 2010 applications show new stylings and usability improvements, including a more smoothly integrated Outlook”

Thank you for your time.

2 comments:

  1. Contrary to popular belief, Office 2010 isn't that hard. What's hard is getting a device that wants to run like it's 1969 to run Office 2010. Now that's a doosy.

    ReplyDelete