Office Mobile 2010 released, free upgrade for WinMo 6.5 users (update)
After having gone to public beta late last year, Office Mobile 2010 is now available in conjunction with the retail release of the full desktop version of Office 2010, bringing comprehensive Word, Excel, and PowerPoint editing capabilities to the pocket -- on Windows Mobile 6.5, that is. Yes, granted, Windows Phone 7 is Microsoft's biggest mobile news this year, but there'll be a huge legacy base of 6.5 users out there for a long time to come, and they're pretty much the core audience for the sorts of features that Office Mobile 2010 is offering: SharePoint integration for grabbing documents from the office, a nifty Bluetooth controller mode for PowerPoint presentations, and so on... you know, suit-and-tie stuff. The download is available today from Windows Marketplace for users of 6.5 devices with an older version of Office Mobile installed -- so go on, Tiger, whip up the hottest quarterly reports the world has ever seen. We know you have it in you. Follow the break for Redmond's full Office 2010 press release.
Update: Curious what Office 2010 will look like on Windows Phone 7? Get a glimpse into the not-so-distant-future in Microsoft's video presentation, and fast forward to 52:45 for the good stuff. [Thanks, Kamara B.]
Update: Curious what Office 2010 will look like on Windows Phone 7? Get a glimpse into the not-so-distant-future in Microsoft's video presentation, and fast forward to 52:45 for the good stuff. [Thanks, Kamara B.]
Microsoft Delivers the Future of Productivity With Office 2010 and SharePoint 2010
New products and cloud services available to businesses today.
NEW YORK - May 12, 2010 - Today, Microsoft Corp. announced the worldwide availability of Microsoft Office 2010 and Microsoft SharePoint 2010, as well as Microsoft Visio 2010 and Microsoft Project 2010, for business customers worldwide. More than 90 million businesses can now deploy the 2010 suite of products, and customers can expect to see significant productivity gains and greater return on their software investments.
"Office 2010 and SharePoint 2010 define the future of productivity," said Stephen Elop, president, Microsoft Business Division. "With the 2010 set of products, organizations will save, innovate and grow as their people benefit from working across the PC, phone and browser."
A commissioned study conducted by Forrester Consulting, "The Total Economic Impact™ of Implementing Microsoft's Integrated Office Productivity Platform," May 2010,1 evaluated the 2010 releases of Office, SharePoint, Exchange and Office Communications Server 2007 R2. The Forrester TEI model employs four fundamental elements including costs, benefits to the entire organization, flexibility and risk. Based on the customer interviews, Forrester constructed a TEI framework for a composite organization and found the ROI to be 301 percent with a payback period of 7.4 months after deployment. The study also found that the composite organization would see more than $13 million in savings over a three-year period and on average, a savings of more than two work weeks per year.
Microsoft's Office 2010 and SharePoint 2010 beta programs were the largest ever, with three times the number of participants compared with the Office 2007 beta program. As a result, 8.6 million people are already using Office 2010 and related products. In addition, more than 1,000 partners are already building solutions for the 2010 set of products.
"We evaluated a number of competitive options in our recent technology assessment, and chose Microsoft Office 2010 as our new desktop productivity standard," said Mark Mastrianni, manager, global technology licensing and acquisition for GE. "This platform will continue to position GE on the leading edge of technology and provide a clear road map that supports our business priorities in the coming years. Office 2010's familiar, easy-to-use interface - coupled with its new tools that will enable better collaboration and drive improved efficiency and productivity for our employees and customers - made this selection the right decision for our company."
Productivity Solutions Across the PC, Phone and Browser
With a familiar productivity experience across the PC, phone and browser,2 Office 2010 and related products deliver new capabilities to help people:
• Connect and collaborate with co-authoring in Microsoft Word, Microsoft PowerPoint and Microsoft OneNote; advanced e-mail management and calendaring capabilities in Microsoft Outlook; and the addition of the new Microsoft Outlook Social Connector, which brings communication history and social network feeds directly into Outlook.
• Work virtually anywhere with Microsoft Office Web Apps, the online companions to Word, PowerPoint, Microsoft Excel and OneNote. Along with easy access to documents from virtually anywhere, Web Apps help preserve the look and feel of a document regardless of device, so content and format are generally preserved while moving between the PC, phone and browser. Effective today, Office Mobile 2010 will be available for free via Windows® Phone Marketplace for all Windows Mobile 6.5 phones with a previous version of Office Mobile. People using Office Mobile 2010 can perform lightweight editing of Office documents and take notes on the go. With Office Mobile, people can work with Office documents stored on their phone, attached to an e-mail, and can browse, edit, and update documents stored on a Microsoft SharePoint 2010 site. SharePoint intranet sites and communities also help people collaborate, regardless of location.
• Help bring ideas to life with video, text and image editing, new broadcast capabilities in PowerPoint, auto-previewing in Word, easy document preparation through the new Microsoft Office Backstage view, and new Sparklines in Excel for precise trend and data visualization.
• Quickly access data to make real-time decisions using the business intelligence capabilities in familiar Office applications that transform everyday work data into valuable information.
Flexible Cloud Solutions
Microsoft's signature productivity technologies are available in the cloud, 3 offering unprecedented choice and flexibility for IT departments when purchasing and deploying solutions.
Office Web Apps will now be available to all Office volume licensing customers. In addition, customers will be able to purchase a subscription to Office Web Apps as part of Microsoft Online Services, Microsoft's cloud-based applications.
With more than 40 million paying customers on Microsoft Online Services, businesses are embracing Microsoft's vision for the cloud. New customers including Kraft Foods, Novartis International and Codelco, the largest mining company in the world, are choosing Microsoft Online Services for its ability to delight end users while delivering enterprise-grade capabilities, security and flexibility.
"We chose Microsoft Online Services for our collaboration applications in the cloud for our 100,000 employees around the world," said Leon V. Schumacher, Group CIO of Novartis. "It will enable our large research and development population to better collaborate to innovate. We can trust Microsoft to provide the enterprise capabilities our company requires to further improve personal productivity and collaboration among our associates so we can focus on our core mission - improving the lives of patients worldwide."
Developer and Partner Opportunities
SharePoint 2010 delivers the business collaboration platform for the enterprise and Internet, enabling developers to rapidly respond to business needs with custom applications and solutions.
SharePoint 2010 delivers on the promise of flexible deployment options: Use Sandboxed Solutions to limit code central processing unit time, Microsoft SQL Server execution time, and exception handling. Plus, use these same technologies to deploy custom code to SharePoint Online.
Through design integration with Visual Studio 2010, developers can use familiar application development tools to create, package and debug SharePoint solutions. It also includes rich application programming interfaces and support for Open XML, Microsoft Silverlight, Representational State Transfer (REST) and Language-Integrated Query (LINQ), which help developers build applications quickly. Developers can also build applications that connect to line-of-business data, use custom workflows, and provide business intelligence data and dashboards to an entire organization.
The SharePoint integration services opportunity for Microsoft partners and developers today is $5.6 billion and is expected to grow to $6.7 billion in 2011, according to Microsoft data.
Availability
Available today in 14 languages, over the course of the next few months, Office 2010 and related products will eventually be available in 94 languages.
Microsoft's global launch website http://www.the2010event.com for the 2010 suite of products was built on Microsoft SharePoint 2010, reaching more than 60 countries and 26 languages worldwide. The site includes a rich set of content that will help customers choose and benefit from the 2010 products, which are available for business purchase now.
Founded in 1975, Microsoft (Nasdaq "MSFT") is the worldwide leader in software, services and solutions that help people and businesses realize their full potential.























And people said folks who bought the HD2 were nuts. Maybe not.
@Waltah
Yeap, i don't regret my HD2 at all. Office mobile is good stuff and that alone justifies owning a winmo devices (as long as Sense UI is built in!).
@Waltah Office Mobile on a huge 4.3 screen. How could they possibly call them nuts?
Wait... you mean technology is used by people in suits and ties too?
Crazy concept! That will never catch on Microsoft!
@futurerheza
But FREE upgrades are never bad!
"Smile and wave boys, just smile and wave" ;)
@R762mm
"Don't look at it, maybe it will go away"
I still using office 2000 on my old xp box
@futurerheza
Agreed, still good on the inside though :)
@futurerheza LOL at the coffee powerpoint!
Who would use Office on a maximum 4" screen? And the GUI is awful! But it's free, no complaint there.
@Atkins People on the go. Sure its not something that most would use every day. But there have been instances where I've gotten attachments to preview or review, and Office Mobile fit the bill for a quick preview of a document and minor editing. I'd rather have the option than not have the option. After all it *IS* a smartphone.
I'm sure there were plenty of people that made similar arguements agaisnt mutlimedia on PMDs/phones and office work on laptops when they first came out too.
Its pretty useful on the bus.
I keep my assignments on my HD2, so I can touch them up whenever I want.
@Luxury Guy @BlackedOut
Hmmm... I see your point. And I agree.
But isn't there another way for simple previewing?
@Atkins
Yeah, see... they make these things called "smart phones" which are like mini-computers, the whole point is so that we could do the things we do on PC, but on a handheld device. See, in the era of 2006 and prior, before the iPhone, 'smartphone' didn't automatically make you think 'fart and flashlight apps'.
Seriously, your comment is proof that most people buy smartphones for the dumbest of reasons... most people just want a toy and nothing more.
On an old MDA back in 2007, I actually sat in an airport and did my weekly work and emailed to it everyone as usual. Now that is smart.
Despite my dickish sarcasm, I'm not saying people HAVE to have some business function to justify having a smartphone... however, I think its pretty damn ignorant to sit there and question who would do these things on a smartphone. If I couldn't do these things, then I'd give up these smartphones so I wouldn't have to hear or see anything about all these lame apps that do nothing and are a huge waste of time and space.
@Hate Everything Well, I'll answer, even with all the sarcasm and condescension from your part. If you bothered to read all two of my comments, you would've seen that I agreed that some people might find this useful.
Still 1) I do not see many people using it and yes, this is only because of the screen size. It's tiny and this poses a very concrete problem. You can do only so much on a small screen - or maybe you'll say you want to run PS on your phone?
2) I also was addressing these particular apps and the crappy UI - maybe if it looked better designed, I wouldn't have a problem?
@Atkins You claim that Office applications are not usable on a small screen while at the same time complaining about the minimalist UI. See the connection? This is function over form at its finest, something that is sorely missed from most phone apps these days.
This is one area where WinMo has a significant advantage over all other mobile OS's. It really is the only one out there that natively sports a minimalist stylus driven UI. You might call it ugly, but if your goal is to get work done as efficiently as possible, your thoughts about the aesthetics of the application you are working in will fade away quickly.
@m00g00 "You claim that Office applications are not usable on a small screen while at the same time complaining about the minimalist UI."
No. I am complaining about Office applications being difficultly usable on a small screen and this GUI not helping the case.
"You might call it ugly..."
It is ugly, but that is not my point. One example : Look at the Excel screenshot - where it is written C12 - why is the row so thick? Clearly it is not dynamic.
@Atkins I'm not sure what is so difficult to understand about the UI presented in those screen shots. It looks just like any pre-ribbon version of Office. Bust out the stylus and you should have no issue controlling it.
I have no idea why the top row is so bloated compared to everything else. The optimist in me would say it has focus, but more likely it is the case of MS being inconsistent in its UI design, a common fault that plagues many of their products.
I'm not trying to say that the WinMo version of Office will be as easy to use as the desktop version. There are always going to be compromises with shrunk down versions of desktop software. Even the most valiant efforts to compensate such as with Mobile Safari pale in comparison to the real thing.
I really do not see how mobile Office looks to be more difficult to use than any other of the thousands of phone sized desktop apps people use every day. More features != more difficult, despite what Apple would have us believe.
@Atkins
I am a business man, and to keep my business running, Excel and calculator is my main tool while using any devices. But you are right about small screen size on most devices to consume Excel's data properly.
Hence I have this 5inch screen HTC Athena, displaying 20+ rows of Excel's data vertically. Anything bigger would be the IPAD, but IPAD is a joke(Don't bother ask me why,you should know why), so the Dell Streak or HP slate(either WebOS or WMoblie7 only, coz desktop Windows7 is another Joke) is my next device of choice to cater to my Excel need.
Let me tell you, Atkins, why you keep failing, because u always speak from your own little kid's point of view, which is very childish. Grown-ups use Excel, OK? And judging from that, I am profiling you as an IPAD user,NO? Because serious grown-ups don't humiliate themselves using an IPAD in the public.
@nswprop No, sorry to disappoint you, but I don't use an iPad. In fact I use excel on a daily basis. But none of my coworkers or me uses it on a phone. One bought the Vaio P, and frankly it wasn't a pleasant experience - I was scrolling around and zooming like crazy. I can't even imagine what would it be on a 4x smaller screen. Add to that the interface from the picture above - granted, I judge only from the picture.
"you keep failing, because u always speak from your own little kid's point of view, which is very childish. Grown-ups use Excel, OK? And judging from that, I am profiling you as an IPAD user,NO?"
That's just ridiculous. Did I say "don't use Excel"? The issues here are small screen size and interface. I've been working more than 6 years now in finance and I have never ever seen someone use a phone for their sheets. And how did we come to the iPad, why do you bring it into this discussion?
Fail !
Reason...no one really works on mobile office. You use a laptop/iPad for that. And that UI sucks... personally I don't see any way WinMo 7 will compete with Android or IPhone OS.
@browserspot -
you're basing that prediction on some screens for winmo 6.5 ??
@browserspot This is ridiculous.
@browserspot even bigger FAIL... no one would ever do business on an oversized and undercapable iPod touch (iPad)
@browserspot
I'd really LOVE to see you open Microsoft Office files on an iPad!!! Also, that UI is for Windows Mobile 6.x not Windows Phone 7. It's a good idea to get your facts straight before saying "FAIL" because you my friend, just FAILED...
@browserspot Lol at doing work on an ipad. Get real
@AstroSeven
Dammit! Don't feed the troll :)
@bitingback I would just address one thing:
"I'd really LOVE to see you open Microsoft Office files on an iPad!"
No problem for that with iWork which costs 30$.
@Atkins
Hence why I said "Microsoft Office"! I wasn't dissing the iPad, and I do know that iWork is available on it, but this is about Microsoft & phones not tablets. Genuine question that I don't know: Does iWork on an iPad open .docx .xlsx & .pptx files?
@Atkins Not trying to troll but Walt Mossberg reported that there are some issues using Office files on the iPad iWork suite, mainly that when they are converted they don't come out properly. He said they were rendered "unreadable".
@Atkins I hasten to add: not every office file.
@David Bailey "He said they were rendered "unreadable"."
I won't say "unreadable", but I have to agree that they are often incorrectly rendered.
@bitingback Point taken. I have no problem with .doc and .xls files. (though I like I said above there are some annoyances - missing fonts and some areas aren't understood by the package, but overall I am happy with it, though I sometimes use NeoOffice too)
Well at least Microsoft isn't completely abandoning their legacy customers....
This still wouldn't persuade me into buying a HD2 myself, but I think I'll stop telling my non techie friends not to buy the phone if they really want it.
! Downloading to HD2 now
Looking at those WinMo screens causes me physical pain.
@jonnythan We can see that! :))
Ah, 2003. Life was simpler then.
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
This has to be a joke. Please 6.5, jump off a cliff.
@David Bailey
Maybe it's for energy drinks? All i know is, I'm buying! it's twice the caffeine at half the price! lol
Does anyone see this in the Windows Marketplace? I'm not.
@makryger
look under the cliff..?
@makryger
I'm having the same problem.
found this download link but i get an error message:
http://marketplace.windowsphone.com/details.aspx?appSKU=a226f64c-d514-4d91-85df-a512bc37c1cd&retURL=/search.aspx%3Fkeywords%3DOffice%2520Mobile
* Don LaFontaine voice *
In a world, where people valued Twitter and fart apps more than Office productivity software..."
Cool, now release a version for Android.
@TimeForTheFairTax
Get Docs to Go
@ Chris Ziegler, is there any word on whether this version is written with Silverlight? I'm looking for signs of synergy with Symbian between WinMo/WP7, and I'm wondering if it will come with the older OS, the newer one, or both.
Silverlight support added to Symbian wasn't an accident.
@christexaport - Nope- Windows Mobile itself (ironically) lacks Silverlight support, so this is definitely not a Silverlight app.
@David Bailey
It should read "half our competitors price + 2x the performance in the open GL benchmark test = 96% market share and repeat customers!"
@futurerheza go buy an HD2 and see if you can call it ugly without your head exploding