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Microsoft Office 15 Preview

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By: 2012-03-16 09:35:35



Forget the rumors. Here's what it's really like to use the Office 15 Technical Preview, which Microsoft recently made available only to a select group of customers under non-disclosure agreement. I was able to get my hands on a copy, and while it's not exactly ready for prime time--a more stable and functional public is due this summer--there are intriguing hints here for the future.
 
Installation
 
The Office 15 Technical Preview doesn't appear to work well in a clean install configuration, but you can upgrade from an existing copy of Office 2010 Professional Plus easily enough. As you can see, the process, for now at least, is almost identical to that for Office 2010.

Looking at the installer, the big thing that stands out is a new Microsoft My Site Documents option, which I've come to understand will eventually replace SharePoint Workspace. Too, Lync is now part of the install, as I'd expected, and runs automatically at boot if installed.
 
Installation took only a several minutes and did require a reboot, as with Office 2010. I installed the Office 15 Technical Preview on top of the Windows 8 Consumer Preview running on a multi-touch capable tablet to see what the touch experience and potential Metro integration looked like.
 
First boot experience
 
After rebooting the tablet and signing in to Windows 8, I immediately scrolled to the end of the Start screen, knowing full well that Office had dumped some number of live tiles there. But even I was surprised by how many there were.

Application user experiences
 
My first stop, as always, was Microsoft Word. This application shows a decidedly friendlier face than does its predecessor, in a full screen experience that indeed mimics some Metro-style design. There's a split view on first load that provides a list of recent documents and then a larger Get Started area with various document templates. If you're familiar with Office for the Mac, its  similar, but nicer looking.

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