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Sunday, September 23, 2012

Microsoft Office 2007 Full version Free Download




WHAT’S NEW IN MICROSOFT OFFICE 2007:

·         The motivated, ground-up rebuild of Microsoft Office Standard 2007 presents significantly different interfaces and new file formats. The new Office looks so unlike its predecessors, it's likely to glimmer intense love-hate responses from users. This upgrade isn't for everyone: If you're patient, eager to try the latest tools, and willing to relearn most of what you already know about Office, then you may relish the challenge of Office 2007.

·         However, if you only use a small fraction of what Office offers or you felt that getting the hang of Office 2003 was painful enough, then you might want to leave Office 2007 on the shelf or try it free for two months first. We see in your mind's eye that power users who have mastered the nooks and crannies of the older versions will curse the steep learning curve. But take heed: The new era of Office affects even those who don't upgrade, and a conversion tool is needed to let older Office versions open Office 2007's default, Open XML files.

·         Office 2007 does offer complex features that you can't yet find somewhere else. However, it also falls short in key areas. Integration among the applications isn't as thorough as we'd hoped, and there's no one-click way to collaborate with others on an edit without buying Microsoft's Groove online collaboration tool or working within a server setting. The advent of Office 2007 comes as a growing number of competing tools are simpler, cost less (if they aren't free), and handle the same core features. Oddly, despite its bevy of Windows Live and Office Live services, Microsoft chose not to build a bridge to the Web for all Office users.

SETUP INFO:

Breezing through the options, our fastest installation of Microsoft Office Standard 2007 took no more than 20 minutes on a Windows XP computer. However, settle into your lead if you're curious about the fine print. We spent 40 minutes just skim the 10,379-word End User License Agreement and stopped before we could understand it all.
From that point on, loading the Office suite onto our hard drive took 15 minutes flat. Office Standard 2007 is smaller than its predecessors, at about 3GB. Unlike the Windows Vista operating system, the new Office does not demand the newest hardware. Office 2007 is supposed to work the same whether running on Windows XP, Windows Server 2003, or Windows Vista.

INTERFACE:

Once you open each Office 2007 application, you'll see a fundamentally different, blue interface that's brighter than in the past. Word, Excel, and PowerPoint arrange features within a tabbed Ribbon toolbar that largely replaces the gray drop-down menus and dialog boxes from a quarter-century of Office software. The Office logo menu, docked in the upper left corner, bundles many commands from the old File and Edit menus. Outlook lacks the logo button and adopts the Ribbon only within its message composition and scheduling windows. 


Windows 8 ISO free Download





The Release Preview of Windows 8 , complete with a new tablet interface and some enhancements to the conventional mouse and keyboard desktop.

HERE’S WHAT IT LOOKS LIKE:

This is everything Microsofttalked about in their preliminary proclamation of Windows 8, but if you want a more exhaustively look at what's new, check out our test drive of the Metro UI, the desktop, Windows Explorer, and the revamped Task Manager, plus our video walkthrough of the Consumer Preview Below.
Microsoft's re-imaginingof Windows 8 is listening carefully very heavily on a new, Metro-style touch-based interface. However, they make a big deal of saying that it's just as usable with a mouse and keyboard and no matter what device you're on, you can switch between the simple Metro interface and the habitual Windows desktop to fit whatever your needs are at that given moment.

PERFORMANCE INCREASES:
One of the issues that's been on our minds since they previewed this new interface was whether this will keep bogging Windows down with more running processes, and whether running a full Windows desktop on a low-powered tablet was really a good idea.

THE LOCK SCREEN:
It's got a beautiful picture along with a few little widgets full of information, like the time, how many emails you have, and so on. However, after swiping to unlock, Windows 8 shows off some pretty painstaking touch based features, particularly a "picture password" feature. Instead of using a PIN or a lock pattern to get into your system, you swipe invisible gestures using a picture to orient yourself. Android molders might find this similar to Cyanogens Mod's lock screen gestures.

The Home Screen:
The home screen is very familiar to anyone who's used Windows Phone. You've got a set of tiles, each of which represents an application, and many of which show information and notifications that communicate to the app. For example, your email tile will tell you how many unread emails you have, your calendartile will show upcoming events, your music tile will show you what's playing, and so on.

THE WINDOWS STORE:
The Windows Store, which is now available in the Consumer Preview, looks much like the home screen, with tiles that exchange letters to different categories and featured apps. From there, you can look at a more detailed list of the available apps in a given section.

A NEW TASK MANAGER:
Microsoft's finally redesignedthe task manager, and it looks pretty great. You have a very simple task manager for basic task killing, but if you're a more advanced user, you can bring up the detailed task manager filled with information on CPU and RAM usage, Metro app history, and even startup tweaking so you can get rid of apps that launch on startup without going all the way into msconfig.

WINDOWS EXPLORER:
They didn't show us a super comprehensively look at the new Windows Explorer, but we did get a little peek. Most of it isn't new information, we'll have native ISO mounting in Windows Explorer, a new Office-style ribbon, and a one folder up button like the old days of XP (thank God). It also has a really cool "quick access" toolbar in the left-hand corner of the title bar, that gives you super quick access to your favorite buttons from the ribbon.

OTHER FEATURES:
Along with these cool features, Windows 8 also comes with other features we've come to know and love in our mobile OSes. It's got system-widespellchecking, so you don't have to rely on a unambiguous app to keep your writing top-notch, as well as a system-wide search feature, that lets you search anything from your music libraryto your contacts to the web itself. It also has a really cool feature for desktop users that lets your run the Metro UI on one monitor while running the traditional desktop on the other.
This is still just a small preview of what you'll find in Windows 8. If you want to see more try it out. There's a lot more to be found and played with, so if you find something particularly neat, share it with us in the comments!