Posts Tagged ‘Microsoft Office’

OnLive Desktop Brings Windows 7 and Microsoft Office to the iPad

January 10th, 2012

OnLive Desktop Brings Windows 7 and Microsoft Office to the iPadTablets are great for consuming content, but so far have been lacking in the ability to create it. Whether it’s the limited hardware capabilities, the touchscreen interface, or just that software, vendors haven’t had enough time to adapt their offerings. So users still turn to desktops when serious work needs to be done. OnLive is looking to change that by offering full Windows applications “from the cloud”, starting by making Microsoft Office available to the iPad.

OnLive Desktop

Called OnLive Desktop, the free app will be available in the iTunes App Store on Thursday, January 12th. The app acts as a remote desktop client for an “as-available” Windows 7 desktop hosted on OnLive’s PC servers. The free OnLive account comes with 2 GB of storage and provides access to Microsoft Word, Excel and Powerpoint, as well as touch based games and several utilities.

OnLive Founder and CEO Steve Perlman stated “OnLive Desktop is the first app to deliver a no-compromise, media-rich Windows desktop experience to iPad, opening up powerful new possibilities for consumers and businesses. iPad users will now be able to simply and securely view and edit cloud-hosted documents with full-featured Windows desktop applications like Microsoft Office, just as if they were using a local high-performance PC. Multi-touch gestures respond instantly and smoothly, while HD videos, animations and PC video games-never before usable on a remote desktop-play seamlessly.”

Familiar Gestures

After starting the app and logging in, the user is presented with a standard Windows 7 desktop, similar to using other remote desktop apps to access your home or work PC. The difference, of course, is that the PC you are accessing isn’t yours. You can open files and applications the same way you would on a desktop, but OnLive Desktop simplifies the process by adapting the touch gestures commonly used on an iPad to work with the desktop. Pinch and zoom, flick to scroll, drag, drop and Aero snap all work as one would expect on the iPad.

Within the desktop, the PC applications have full functionality, allowing one create and edit files. Though OnLive Desktop can be used with a Bluetooth keyboard, an onscreen keyboard can also be used to provide input for the applications. Within the Windows 7 desktop, users can navigate, open and edit files just as they would on the desktop in their office.

Ready for Business?

As mentioned above, the free service operates on an “as-available” basis, using left over capacity from OnLive’s substantial remote gaming infrastructure. For businesses, where as-available doesn’t cut it, and 2GB is too little storage, a subscription service called OnLive Desktop Pro will be available soon for $9.99 per month. The service will not only provide a larger selection of applications and features, and 50GB of storage space, but also priority access to OnLives server resources. For businesses with special needs, OnLive Enterprise will be available, allowing not only installation of all the custom applications a company needs, but also providing IT staff the ability to fully control access to the applications and associated data.

OnLive Everywhere?

OnLive Desktop for iPad is just the start, OnLive says Android, smartphones, PC, Mac and even TVs and monitors will soon be supported, allowing access “anywhere, on any device, at any resolution”. The challenges OnLive faces include making sure its service can scale gracefully when demand increases, and whether users will be comfortable working with a desktop interface using touch based inputs. Perhaps the timing is just right to get the service running smoothly in time for Windows 8, which will offer a more touch friendly interface that could pair well with OnLive’s service.

Source:http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/247681/onlive_desktop_brings_windows_7_and_microsoft_office_to_the_ipad.html

Microsoft office goes cloud to join cloud war with Google Docs

July 1st, 2011

Microsoft holds a virtual monopoly on office productivity software. Most computer users in the world use the Office software for word processing, spreadsheet, presentation and other purposes. However, Microsoft Office faces a strong enemy — Google Docs, which provides cloud service, that means users do not have to purchase any software to be installed on their computers. If they go online, they can start use the application, and they do not need to worry about their files, because the files also go with the cloud, and users can get access to their files at anytime, anywhere.

The cloud-based Office 365 is designed for the mobile age when people go with their software and documents.

The actual features and functionality of the tools have a lot of bearing on which productivity suite users choose. The Word Web App is more visually appealing and polished than its Google counterpart, but overall the two seem roughly equivalent in features.

When tested on a sample presentation in both the PowerPoint Web App and Google Docs Presentation, the PowerPoint Web App immediately presented with a diverse selection of attractive themes to choose from, but Google defaulted to plain black text on a plain white background.

On slide and image, in Google Presentations, the image filled the whole slide but the PowerPoint Web App was smart enough to size the image automatically.

When push comes to shove, the features of the Office Web Apps in Office 365 are pretty much the same as what Google Docs has to offer. However, Microsoft makes key features easier to get to, and works more intuitively. For users already familiar with Microsoft Office, the Office Web Apps version is easy to use.

Both Office 365 and Google Docs are Web-based platforms, and they will work from any Web browser. Google Docs excels in the Chrome browser while Microsoft Office 365 works best in Internet Explorer. It makes sense that each would make sure that their online productivity tools are optimized for performance and functionality in their own browser.

Collaboration in real time is the primary selling point of Google Docs, which can be shared with any other Google account. The users who share a file can all access and work with it simultaneously. Each user is assigned a unique color so users can easily identify who is making changes to what.

But in the price war, Microsoft can not beat Google Docs. Office 365 starts at six dollars per user per month for the Professional and Small Business plan. The Medium Business and Enterprise plans range from 10 to 27 dollars per user per month. But the Google Docs is free.

Microsoft also faces a challenge on how to go cloud while still keep the computer-based Office software.

Statistics showed that nearly nine of every 10 office computers runs one of the 14 versions of Office the company has released since the software’s launch in 1989. The company now needs to convince those computer users, estimated at about one billion, to switch to Office in the cloud without disrupting the legacy version that is financing the transition.

The growing cloud market is profitable. The International Data Corp. projected the market for cloud-computing services and software is expected to grow more than 27 percent annually over the next five years and reach 73 billion dollars by 2015.

It is estimated that by 2015 one of every seven dollars spent on technology will be connected with cloud computing and the winners of the cloud platform wars will likely be the new power brokers of the IT industry.

It is reported that Salesforce.com has added a communication technology called Chatter to its service to allow clients to communicate within its sales management cloud service. Amazon’s Elastic Cloud has attracted enterprise customers because of its ability to scale up capacity to match peaks in client demand.

By 2015, it is estimated that software-oriented cloud services will account for roughly three-quarters of all spending on public cloud services.

Source:http://english.vietnamnet.vn/en/world-news/10097/microsoft-office-goes-cloud-to-join-cloud-war-with-google-docs.html

Jive Software buys toolbar developer OffiSync

May 24th, 2011

Jive Software Inc. of the US has acquired toolbar developer OffiSync Ltd. for $30 million, reportedly in shares. Although the acquisition is in shares, it is not bad for OffiSync, especially since Jive is planning an IPO soon.

OffiSync CEO Oudi Antebi and CTO Roy Antebi founded the company in 2008. The company develops toolbars for synchronizing documents on Microsoft Office, Google Docs, and Google Apps environments.

OffiSync’s investors include Vertex Venture Capital, Seattle-based fund GTD Capital LLC, run by former VMware CEO Paul Maritz and Pelephone CEO Eyal Levy, and Trilogy Equity Partners. OffiSync raised $1 million, and investors will make a ten-fold return on investment.

Synchronizing between two different digital work environments is difficult without mediation tools, which is where the importance of OffiSync comes in. The acquisition is also important because OffiSync is not the only player on the field. Google Inc. (Nasdaq: GOOG) launched Google Cloud Connect a few months ago to provide a similar service.

In a YouTube video in February, Oudi Antebi explained the differences between his company’s solution and that of Google. Nonetheless, it is hard to see how these difference add up to a company value of tens of millions of dollars.

Jive Software develops enterprise communication and collaboration software for companies and social networks. Jive CEO Tony Zingale replace Mercury Enterprise Software CEO Amnon Landan in 2005 in the wake of an options backdating scandal. Zingale, who was appointed Jive CEO in February, said that he planned to take the company public this year, when it will have $100 million in sales. The company raised $57 million from Sequoia Capital and Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers.

Source:http://www.globes.co.il/serveen/globes/docview.asp?did=1000648163&fid=1725

Microsoft Office 365 vs. Google Apps for Business: Cloud Showdown

April 18th, 2011

Office 365, Microsoft’s answer to Google Apps for Business, just became available to the public for beta testing. With this move, Redmond comes closer to delivering a package of tools to companies seeking e-mail, word processing, Web-based meetings, and scores of other services that work on PCs and mobile devices alike.

But wait a minute, wasn’t Google Apps Google’s answer to Microsoft’s dominance in the productivity space? After all, Microsoft has held a steady lead in such desktop software for decades. It wasn’t until 2006 that Google released Docs, a bare-bones online word processor formerly known as Writely. Docs still barely scratches the surface of the features found in Microsoft Word.

That’s all true, but Google offered collaboration as a killer feature while Microsoft dragged its heels in migrating Office to the cloud. Office Web Apps–online counterparts to Word, Excel, and PowerPoint–didn’t reach the masses until nearly a year ago.

Users of the free Google Docs only need to press the Share button to invite anybody to a document and watch each others’ edits happen live. People who didn’t “get” what Microsoft SharePoint does, or didn’t want to pay for a corporate account, could tinker with collaboration instantly in Google Docs. That kind of lightbulb moment radically shifted the way many people work.

Why These Services Matter

The cloud–just another buzzword for anything stored online–is where the future of productivity lives, after all. More and more workers take their work away from their desks onto mobile devices, and bring their own smartphones and tablets to work.

Office 365 and Google Apps for Business promise to manage the nitty-gritty, back-end tasks that many businesses pay IT staff to handle (see how that’s meant to work here). Their cloud services can free a company to get things done without a tech whiz.

There are potentially big savings in migrating tools to the cloud. Online meetings reduce the need for business travel, and Web and mobile apps enable workers across oceans to work on the same page, literally, at the same moment. Plus, outfitting employees with software that works in a Web browser means there’s little need to install local applications, then manage updates and patches. You may not even need to equip workers with computers–or outfit headquarters with a server room and IT staff.

What’s Inside

Office 365 combines online editions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote, with Exchange for mobile calendar and e-mail access. There’s also SharePoint for an intranet and shared documents; and Lync for IM, online meetings, and audio and video calls. An extra fee covers Microsoft Office Professional Plus software, including Outlook for e-mail and calendars. Read more about what’s inside Office 365 here, and tour its tools for end users and business managers.

Google Apps for Business includes Docs, Spreadsheets, Presentations, Gmail, Calendar; Groups for group collaboration; Sites for intranets. Google also offers a bunch of stuff not quite found in Office 365–but that you can get even without a Google Apps subscription–such as Reader, AdWords, Picasa, and Blogger.

Then there’s the Google Apps Marketplace. Similar to Apple’s genius move of inviting third parties to build apps for the iPhone, Google invites anyone to create tools for Apps for Business. There are apps for CRM, payroll, and accounting, just to start.

These packages differ, by the way, from the free consumer services they include–and which are probably enough for most home-based businesses. Microsoft Office Web Apps is the name for online versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote. And the regular Google Apps include Gmail, Calendar, Docs, Spreadsheets, Presentations, Sites, and services such as AdWords and Reader.

Office 365 starts at $6 per user per month, while Google Apps for Business is slightly cheaper at $50 per year, which amounts to $4.17 monthly per seat. However, Microsoft provides a nice incentive for paying for Office Professional Plus as a monthly fee, far more affordable than the retail price of the desktop software (although that’s a different story if your company already enjoys a volume license discount).

Which Will Win?

Which tech titan is going to “own” the cloud? For now, at least, most businesses seeking a do-it-all package of go-anywhere business tools will basically turn to either Microsoft or Google. Consumers may be brand agnostic when it comes to online services, but most aren’t going to research to know smaller brands, such as Zoho (even if it claims 4 million users).

Google dangles all kinds of bait to lure people away from Microsoft. Google Apps Migration for Microsoft Exchange lets organizations move e-mail, calendars, and contacts as well as PST files, and IMAP server data, to Google Apps. The Google Cloud Connect plug-in for Microsoft Office 2003 through 2010 lets you collaborate with other Google users within Office.

Google Apps opened online collaboration to the masses, but there’s still room for Microsoft to leverage its legacy and sell Office 365 hard to existing customers. Google Apps counts 3 million users, but there are ten times as many users of Office Web Apps. And millions of people use Microsoft’s Business Productivity Online Standard Suite (BPOS), which will upgrade to Office 365. Google remains the search king, but it can’t claim anywhere near the user base that Microsoft does for any of its apps; 750 million people use Microsoft’s desktop Office.

Still, the public is fickle, and business customers want whatever will save them time, money, and migraines. Microsoft and Google each enable each others’ offerings to integrate to some extent, so users of either Office 365 or Google Apps can dabble in parts of both–at least in their consumer components. And both services are available for free, 30-day trials.

I, for one, use Google Apps daily and the desktop Microsoft Office almost as often. There are still many tasks that Google’s online tools can’t handle, but it lets me access and edit documents anywhere. Why not use Office Web Apps instead? Well, by the time it was available, I already had almost half a decade of documents on Google’s servers.

In addition, my workplace uses Google Apps for Business, but I also lean on the consumer Docs and Spreadsheets for personal purposes, such as journals and all sorts of lists. I rarely need the fancy formatting from Microsoft Word or PowerPoint, or an Excel spreadsheet with deep calculations and a million rows of data. Nor do I crave a unified communications tool such as Microsoft Lync. Google and Skype allow video chat, and scores of screen-sharing and online meeting services are free. But my needs are specific to those of an editor brokering mostly in plain text. An engineer at a solar panel start-up maybe couldn’t live without Excel on her PC.

Microsoft can “win” this cloud battle by attracting more users than Google, if it convinces many existing customers to adopt Office 365. However, its many moving pieces and even the pricing structure are more complex than for Google Apps for Business. If you want to get started quickly with a cloud package and don’t need features as rich as Microsoft’s, Google’s option just feels friendlier.

Ultimately, Microsoft’s package is probably a better choice for companies seeking a more formal, polished face on communcations. But Google Apps for Business feels the natural selection for companies that do most of their work online, given its AdWords integration and possibilities for new tools to pop up in its Apps Marketplace.

Source:http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/225408/microsoft_office_365_vs_google_apps_for_business_cloud_showdown.html

New Microsoft Office 365 will be leased to business

October 25th, 2010

Microsoft, the innovating software giant, is launching in first half 2011 new offer aiming professionals: Office 365, which will include monthly leasing fees that combine software and online services by cloud computing (data available from any Internet-connected computer). Besides traditional desktop software, the suite will enable business customers gain access online sharing tools such as ‘Share Point Online,’ ‘Exchange Online’ and ‘Lync Online.’

Several offers will be available depending on company size. For small businesses, fewer than twenty-five employees, Company suggests packages priced at US $6.56 per month per user. This includes Office Software and online tools for sharing. For medium-large enterprises or administrations, Redmond proposes leasing choices starting at US $ 2.19 per month, trough US $11.25 per month. Microsoft Office Professional plus Custom package leases at US $28.45 per month. This includes extranets, videoconferencing and teleconferencing, Web conferencing and support 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Current partners are elated. With this offering, Software Company is clearly pursuing new customers, especially small businesses; thereby countering competitor’s services such as ‘Google Apps.’ “These products, once relegated to large companies with IT departments, are now available to businesses of all sizes,” said at a news portal, Laura Goudiard du Mesnil, Micorosoft Chief for on line services in France

Side partners are pleased: Office 365 is good news. “This new formula enables us accelerating acquisition and adoption of these solutions by all users,” said in news brief Mr. Xavier Raymond, commercial chief for AI3, company specializing in deploying Microsoft solutions. “We had a large customer waiting list; now, we can cover a wider need spectrum,” he added.

Claimed an undisclosed Microsoft spokesperson: “business customers should save 10-50% of their allocated software budget whereas Microsoft increases its market share. “ Soon, beta versions may be available on line in thirteen countries: registration on request. Now, Giant Software writer hopes that with this software suite it can satisfy customers from all latitudes.

Source:http://www.examiner.com/technology-in-miami/new-microsoft-office-365-will-be-leased-to-business

Excel password recovery software

October 10th, 2010

There may be a time when you become aware that you have forgotten password for your Microsoft Office, or Excel or other documents.

It is in such cases you have to think of Password Recovery Software which is in fact of great importance, for people who use the computer all the time.

Just imagine of being denied access to your data which can be a frustrating experience.

If you have installed a suitable Excel Password Recovery Software you can cease worrying about it, and start working without bothering about the possibility of having forgotten the password.

This will enable you to recover the password, it will remove the password, so that the access to your documents restores.

It will not only crack the passwords for any one application like Excel, but it can work on all MS Word applications, or for retrieval of email passwords.

Yes, with this Excel Password Recovery Software you can access your email even if you have forgotten the passwords, with a simple process.

Once the software is installed in your PC, you have to merely document the password which you would like to restore. This software will use a variety of methods to bring back the password in as short a time as possible.

Indeed a Password Recovery Software is of great impact to people who would like to stay ahead in the competition.

Some of the software are easy to use, and precisely for this reason they are very popular with computer users, who rely on them for their emergency requirements.

But then again, if you forget the password for the Password Recovery Software itself, you can never access your Excel or spreadsheets or office documents. So, remember this!.

The process of restoring a password necessitates specialized software which can put into use a number of methods to open the files.

It uses a dictionary attack, which refers to words listed in a dictionary is being used as a possible passwords; albeit a dictionary attack cannot bring results if the password is not in the dictionary.

The software employs in such cases the brute force attack, to put into operation many other options for the recovery of the password.

But when you opt for reputed software like Excel Password Recovery Software the retrieval of the passwords is guaranteed.

Even if the passwords are programmed in such a way that the people will not be able to decipher them, it will succeed in finding out.

Whether the password if short or long and complex, such Password Recovery Software can bring you results in a matter of moments, recovering even passwords in other languages.

Use a trial version of the software before you buy it, and only after finding it useful you can go for installation.

Source:http://www.booshnews.com/2010/10/10/excel-password-recovery-software/

Are you ready for microsoft office web applications?

August 7th, 2010

Bespoke Software Development

Can’t find ready-made software that can cater towards your business needs? This is where custom developed software comes into the picture.

Bespoke software will help you automate your manual business processes, enabling you to perform them faster and accurately thereby saving you time and money.

A good IT company should assess your needs and come up with the most suitable and cost-effective solution based upon your organisation’s specific requirements.

Systems Integration

Systems integration is of great importance to the IT sector mainly due to the diverse choice of software that is currently available for almost every business industry.

In order to meet specific requirements, organisations need the ability to solve problems that cannot be solved on its own.

Nowadays, it is possible to integrate your existing system with other computer systems and software applications, whether they belong to you, your partners or third parties.

Hence, allowing for an open and distributed computational capability.

Systems Migration

Companies are continually searching for new ways to improve their business and gain a competitive edge. This may entail altering your organisations IT infrastructure which would involve the migration of core systems from the old platform to a new modern environment.

By migrating to the latest environment, it can offer real business advantages and rewards.

You will no longer be tied down to software for which there is no more support or compatible hardware available. An efficient and flexible system also results in lower operating and maintenance costs.

Source:http://www.booshnews.com/2010/08/07/are-you-ready-for-microsoft-office-web-applications/

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