Microsoft Office 15 Features Leaked

According to a recent post on The Verge, details of Microsoft’s Technical Preview version of Office 15 have been revealed. The next-gen office suite has lots to offer, with a host of new and improved features in each of the core applications of Office 15. New features such as Touch and Reading Mode and also Weather Bar feature are incorporated in Outlook 15. Following are the improvements in the new Microsoft Office 15:

Word 15

In order to improve the reading experience in its word processor application, Microsoft has included a new Read Mode that removes distractions from the user interface, and provides for an easy reading experience with text that aligns automatically into columns to fit the screen. The Read Mode also works well with a Resume Reading function that automatically bookmarks the last position in a document.

Microsoft has also included two new features to Word 15— Object Zoom, Expand and Collapse. With Object Zoom users can zoom in on pictures and objects by simply double clicking on them, filling the screen with tables, charts, and images. Whereas, Expand and Collapse will allow user  a one-click option to hide or reveal paragraphs under their headings.In addition to this, there is a  Touch Mode feature for Word 15 which lets users scroll through documents with touch, also enlarging the ribbon along the way.

Excel 15

With Excel 15 again, Microsoft is planning to make it more efficient and convenient for the users who work with large data sets. With Quick Analysis Lens, users can quickly access ways to visually represent data, and with the use of recommended charts and Pivot Tables, visualize information based on data patterns. Another feature named  Flash Fill, simplifies the reformatting and rearrangement of data in an Excel spreadsheet. Excel 15′s Touch Mode feature is designed to let users browse through charts, graphs, and tables on tablet devices just by their touch.

PowerPoint 15

In order to improve the standard of presentation in the corporate world, Microsoft is planning to give users the functionality to do so by making the aspect ratio of PowerPoint presentations 16:9 by default in PowerPoint 15. This will allow PowerPoint 15 users to create professional-looking designs and presentations.PowerPoint 15′s new touch mode features will also let presenters move through slides and presentations using a touch screen or tablet PC.

Outlook 15

With Outlook 15, Microsoft aims to bring in some new features to improve user experience. Thus, a new Peeks feature which lets users see their schedule, view details about people they’re emailing, and review tasks all within the same screen.Also, a  new Weather Bar feature will allow users to check the weather before accepting meeting invites or planning new meetings.

OneNote 15

 

Image Credits[TheVerge]

In addition to preparing a Metro style version of OneNote for Windows 8 users,Microsoft is also bringing some new features to the desktop version of OneNote. Auto-updating file views let OneNote 15 users see content previews from embedded Excel and Visio files, including any updates made. Tables support in OneNote has been improved, allowing users to sort, add headers, and convert a OneNote table into an attached spreadsheet. The Touch Mode feature of OneNote 15 lets tablet users take advantage of their fingers and hands to move through pages and notes without a keyboard.

 

In totality a number of improvements and new features are incorporated in Office 15, and Microsoft is only at the beginning of testing some of these externally. However, Microsoft isn’t revealing any of the planned features for Office 15 just yet, but the features that have been detailed in this post are part of its key testing phase for the initial Technical Preview, which makes waiting for the beta to be released in summer worth while waiting.


  • Ludeen

    Microsoft has had one idea and that was this whole metro thing. Since then, they are basing everything they do around that. Windows 7, Vista and XP looked fine! If something isn’t broken, don’t fix it, as the saying goes but Microsoft has ignored that and created Windows 8, Office 15 and a lot of apps around this ONE idea which in it self is not liked by the majority of people.

    They need to step back and think, what is the objective of a new operating system and work backwards from that to get to Windows 8 rather then working backwards from their new start menu and asking how can we develop a whole new chain of products around this idea.

    • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100002918017621 Jose Mancilla

       true

    • splat

      Some people say mans greatest invention was the wheel…..

      Well some people say it was the second wheel…

      • Ludeen

         Some people write meaningful and relevant comments…

        While you just incorrectly recall on a saying…

    • NoClipMode

      Actually most people like Metro. Theres just a small but vocal minority like yourself who wont shut the fuck up and just adapt to new and better things. Many people are pleased MS are finally giving their products a single coherent design, rather than a mess of things that look completely different from each other and confuse people.

      • kukhuvud

        Yes, becuase I absolutely need Metro on Windows Server.  Because a start menu is confusing.

        • NoClipMode

          A start menu IS confusing. It’s a dated obsolete mess thats a slow way of doing anything, it does not belong in any modern OS. Simply going to the new Metro Start screen and typing the first 2 or 3 letters of what you’re looking for is way quicker than messing around in a tiny box scrolling up and down hunting through folders. MS tried to stop idiots from doing this when they introduced the Search box in Vista’s Start menu. But if you’re stuck in the 1990′s then you can still pin anything you like to the Metro screen, including folders.

          • Mike

            Start menu is confusing? Ok, I agree.. you shouldn’t go to “Start” to shut down, but then I don’t think you guys have ever had to do anything beyond browsing the web and checking your e-mail from the sounds of it. Apparently you’ve never been forced to use an earlier OS such as Win 3.1 or earlier, which would make you realize what a revolution the Start menu was. And oddly enough, another OS that must seem ”dated” in your eyes is Linux, one of the most secure operating systems out there that STILL uses a centralized menu interface in its GUI (if you use a GUI, that is). Though I can very much agree on the usability factor, I can tell that you are looking at all of this from the standard, non-technical end user perspective. Keep in mind: Computers were not originally designed to be toys. They were productivity machines for science and business. Coming from someone who started with Win95 (BSOD FTW!!!) and then learning Windows administration on Server 2003, I learned real quick to respect the usability of that “dreaded” Start Menu. Everything seem out of place? Right click and select “Sort By Name”. HOLYCRAP.. alphabetical order!!! Still confused on Windows Server? Use the Server Manager – it’s an amazing time saver on Win2k8, or create your own custom MMC, quit whining and learn to be an admin. I know that’s a bit much to take in at once, so you may want to read this again.

            That aside, I’m thrilled with the new look. I like the updated style, and the ability to be familiar with an interface that will be identical on PCs, tablets, AND phones is freaking awesome. The one bitching about the change obviously never realized it started happening with IE9 (which was actually an updated IE8 interface and a few back-end tweaks) and it had a design based on icons representing things you could access, like Favorites and the configuration options. I’ll admit, I had to bring back the menu bar, but I got used to the rest and can’t stand using IE8 on my old XP box anymore. The new design had been coming for the last two years, and if you couldn’t tell then you weren’t paying attention. Keep up with change or just don’t upgrade. Windows 7 will be around and supported for quite some time, while tablets & phones will be used more and more and laptops won’t be used for international travel AS MUCH. Oh yeah.. and my friend bought a 28″ 1920×1200 touch screen monitor in preparing for the sweetness that is going to be Win8. I haven’t used a mouse since I owned my first laptop as I quickly got used to the mousePAD or just kept to the good old keyboard shortcuts. Learn to adapt and embrace the future, but remember and respect what brought us to where we are today.

          • NoClipMode

            Actually Mike i started with Windows before you did, on Windows 3.1, so i remember when Win 95 came out with the Start menu. I’ve used every single version on Windows since then, even ME, and almost every day i do work on my PC, not simple Office stuff either. Programming, 3D modelling and web design. Being as i often design and program UI’s myself i look at the new Start Screen with an actual understanding of how and why things work. Many people dont understand why MS have made changes and done things the way they have, they just dont like it because it’s different and cant deal with change, when almost everything is improved with the new Start Screen. I’m using two 30″ 2560×1600 monitors and even on these things Win 8 looks great, plus the search functionality is much improved because i can now get 150 search results displayed to me on the new UI, compared to handful of results in the tiny old Start menu, which also made no use of my high resolution (Win 8′s Start Screen now scales with resolution).

            And yes, the old Start menu is confusing – to the average person. In 1995 it made sense, in 2012 it certainly does not. It’s only because it’s been around so long that people are used to it. The new Metro Start Screen will be a big improvement to new Windows users as they will not be used to over 16 years of the same old crap. Yeah the new stuff will spook old users at first, but it literally takes an hour at most to learn, then maybe a week to get used to it, then people will see it’s more powerful and customizable plus you’ll never have to learn any of it again.

          • Tom

            I think metro should stay on tablets etc.. because that is what it was designed for. People like me who are Visual effects artist using programs like maya, nuke and various other programmes, this interface is useless. 

          • NoClipMode

            Well i use 3DS Max, Photoshop, and After Effects and this interface is better than the old Start menu for launching these programs. How about learning how to use it properly? The desktop is still there and works the same with all your programs. And the new Start Screen does everything the old Start menu did plus a lot more, and its more customisable. I can get work done quicker on Win 8.

      • http://www.facebook.com/matt.tanous Matthew Tanous

        Coherent design?  How about “fuck you for using a mouse”?  Because that’s what Metro seems to do to me.  I don’t need giant fucking tiles on my start menu (and I definitely don’t need it hiding my current work, especially if I choose a Metro app and can’t have multiple windows anymore), because I use a MOUSE – which is WAY more precise than touch ever will be, if only due to the size of the average fingertip.  Windows 7 needed improvements, yes.  Windows 8 ignored any usable improvements on the standard desktop side, opting instead for making that worse in exchange for some touch capability that only matters for tablets and some laptops.  There is a reason that iOS is not the same on the Mac and the iPad, and Microsoft basically ignored that in favor of tablets only.  I cannot imagine typing long papers or programming with a touch interface – it would take way too long and be way too complicated when compared to the standard interface.  Yet MS seems to want to move away from that standard as fast as it can get away with….

    • ElJimmy

      It sounds like it’s 1993 and you’re saying, “what the hell is a start button!? I liked my ‘Accessories’ icon just fine. It opened up a window and had what I needed!” I think it’s just shy of idiotic to say that Microsoft should just keep things the same and stick with the same layout they’ve been using for almost ten years. Name one successful multi-billion dollar international company that has used that methodology to find success. Oh… what? You can’t? Hmm…