Office "14" - Info

Romani48

Power Member
Microsoft Office "14" FAQ

The truth is out there--sort of. While there are literally no firm details about Office 14--the version of Office that will succeed Office 2007 in about two years--Microsoft has finally begun discussing the roadmap for this release and the general direction it is heading. Presumably, we'll see more Ribbon-ized applications and a more customizable Ribbon all around, but we'll have to wait and see. No, it's not much yet, but here's what we know about Office 14.
Credit where credit is due: Stephen Chapman at Aero Experience was the first to discover and publish information about Office 14.
Q: What is Office 14?

A: Office 14 is the next version of Office 2007 (or what Microsoft calls the 2007 Microsoft Office System).
Q: What does the 14 signify?

A: 14 is the version number. Office 2007 was called Office 12 internally at Microsoft. The company skipped 13 for superstitious reasons.
Q: Is Office 14 the final name?

A: No, Office 14 is a codename only.
Q: When will Office 14 ship?

A: Microsoft plans to release Office 14 in the first half of 2009, about two years after the consumer launch of Office 2007.
Q: What about the beta?

A: Microsoft plans to ship Office 14 Beta 1 in the first half of 2008 and Office 14 Beta 2 in the second half of 2008.
Q: What applications/features/enhancements will Office 14 include?

A: No-one outside of Microsoft knows (yet) and to be fair, the feature-set for Office 14 is still being worked out.
Q: So what do we know about Office 14? Anything?

A: At this point, Microsoft is only talking in very broad strokes. (This is in sharp contrast to the situation with Office 2007, where I was able to discover a much deeper range of features about two years before that product shipped: See my showcase previewing Office 2007 for details.
Anyway, here are the current focus points for Office 14 at this point in time. This data comes from a Microsoft presentation, and I've reworded them to make them more readable and understandable in some places.
1. Individual Impact
Objective: Continued focus on individual productivity and effectiveness
Microsoft will continue to invest in providing tools for individuals to be productive and effective. The company will be working to make individuals more self-sufficient by enabling them to perform more sophisticated tasks themselves and providing more self and community-based help options. Office 14 will include improved search relevancy and refinement of the result-oriented database.
2. Communication and Collaboration
Objective: Enable better communication and more efficient information sharing to keep communities, co-workers, partners and customers in sync
Microsoft will continue to invest in team effectiveness and will be expanding this to include further unification of communications and the ability to work easily with partners and customers. There will be deeper Unified Communications integration with Office 14, including capabilities that make communications and collaboration more convenient to the user (regardless of device or connectivity) and manageable by IT (through unified identity and robust policy/compliance support).
3. Enterprise Content Management
Objective: Author, Manage and Organize Complex Documents and Content
Microsoft will expand what it provided in Office 2007 for document management to allow better management of complex documents and content. The company will be making sure it keeps the overhead of document management to a minimum and that it is simple for end users to participate in document management processes. Office 14 will include a flexible storage solution for Digital Asset Management.
4. Business Process and Business Intelligence
Objective: Make the right information available throughout the business processes
Microsoft will make it easy to find, analyze and use the expertise and data hidden within an organization and its business systems to make better informed decisions personally and within a team, while continuing to work within a business process or workflow. Office 14 will bring business intelligence (BI) to business processes, instead of having BI as an isolated and as-needed activity.
5. Office Business Platform
Objective: Make it simple to build client & web-based business applications
For corporate developers, Microsoft will deliver a platform on which they can easily build and deliver rich solutions that incorporate workflow, business system integration and Office client familiarity. Office 14 will include Declarative Programming advances and improved Business Data Catalog (BDC) integration.
6. Manageability and Security
Objective: Make it easy to deploy and manage around the globe
Microsoft has made great strides in the last few years on the security, reliability, and deployment of Office, and will continue to invest in these fundamentals. Microsoft will also continue to make global deployments easier with federated, offline and virtualized models. Office 14 will further improve offline experience in products such as SharePoint and assist global deployments via federated and virtualized deployments.
Q: When will Microsoft start working on Office 14?

A: As always, Microsoft works on the next two versions of major products like Office simultaneously. Since Office 2007 has been completed, the emphasis has switched now to Office 14. According to the company, it will spend 20 percent more on research and development for Office 14 than it did for Office 2007, or about $930 million each during development.

FONTE
 
Q: What does the 14 signify?

A: 14 is the version number. Office 2007 was called Office 12 internally at Microsoft. The company skipped 13 for superstitious reasons.
LOL :P

Vamos lá ver o que sai. Ainda é cedo pa previsões, mas pelo menos o 2007 foi uma boa evolução em relação ao anterior, estão no bom caminho.
 
???

Achas que o Office 07 foi uma barraca ?

A forma como o sistema de ribbons foi implementado é uma grande barraca. Em si as ribbons não são más, mas o facto de não podermos personalizar como nos dá mais jeito, é um grande retrocesso ao que tinham antes. Não gosto que Microsoft me imponha a forma que eles acham que devemos trabalhar. Tenho o meu 2003 completamente personalizado e basta-me 1 click para aceder a determinadas funcionalidades, enquanto que no 2007 tenho de fazer pelo menos 2/3 clicks. Pode não parecer muito, mas trabalhar um dia inteiro desta forma torna-se irritante.
 
Deves representar uma pequeníssima percentagem de utilizadores, porque a grande maioria está contente com este sistema e encontra aquilo que quer rapidamente. A começar por mim.
E se não estás contente, há um editor qualquer que lançou um programa/patch/whatever para repor os menus "à antiga" no Office 2007. Não sei se é eficaz ou não (os screenshots dizem que sim). Procura no Google.

De resto, Master-chief: para dizeres uma baboseira dessas mais valia não dizeres nada.
 
Deves representar uma pequeníssima percentagem de utilizadores, porque a grande maioria está contente com este sistema e encontra aquilo que quer rapidamente. A começar por mim.
E se não estás contente, há um editor qualquer que lançou um programa/patch/whatever para repor os menus "à antiga" no Office 2007. Não sei se é eficaz ou não (os screenshots dizem que sim). Procura no Google.

Se procurares pela net fora (não apenas neste forum) vais reparar que esta queixa é comum, de tal forma que se colocou (e não se verificou) a possibilidade de a MS voltar a colocar os menus na SP1, ou pelo menos possibilitar activar essa opção. Para quem usa o Office de forma intensiva, este é um grande problema. Por isso, o problema não é só meu ou do uma pequena minoria de utilizadores. Experimenta meter um botão no Excel para paste special->values e depois diz-me alguma coisa. Essa é uma funcionalidade que quem usa o Excel por motivos profissionais usa imenso. Para o utilizador normal é indiferente, pois não usa nem metade das funcionalidades. Experimenta escrever uma tese ou um documento com o Endnote+Mathtype no Word no 2003 e no 2007. No 2003 tens os buttons todos a um click, no 2007 andas a passear de ribbon para ribbon para encontrares o que queres.

Bastava darem a possibilidade de escolha e não imporem a forma como eles acham que devemos trabalhar ou que a média dos consumidores que eles inquiriam acharam que eram os shortcuts deviam estar. Obviamente que o bold todos usam e por isso deveria estar na ribbon home. No entanto, como uso ctrl+b, para mim era perfeitamente dispensável. quem diz bold, diz itálico, underline e afins. Como vês por estes simples exemplos, para mim, esses botões não deviam estar na ribbon mas eles têm que os meter porque a maior parte dos utilizadores não usa shortcuts. Se me permitissem personalizar, nada disso aconteceria. Para mim os menus são indiferentes.
 
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