Friday, March 2, 2012

Office for Mac 2011, Home and Student Edition (1 User, 1Mac)

Office for Mac 2011, Home and Student Edition (1 User, 1Mac)

Product Details

  • Product Dimensions: 19 x 13.8 x 2.9 cm ; 113 g
  • Delivery Destinations: Visit the Delivery Destinations Help page to see where this item can be delivered.
  • ASIN: B003YCOJA8
  • Release Date: 26 Oct 2010

By : Microsoft
Price : £79.20
Office for Mac 2011, Home and Student Edition (1 User, 1Mac)

Product Description


For All Life’s Opportunities
With over 1 billion PCs and Macs running Office, Microsoft Office is the most-trusted and most-used productivity suite ever. And Office for Mac 2011 is here to help you do more with your Mac your way. Use familiar applications like Word, Excel, and PowerPoint to help you take your ideas further. And since Office for Mac is compatible with Office for Windows, you can work on documents with virtually anyone on a Mac or PC. Store your files in a password protected online SkyDrive folder to access, edit, or share your work from virtually anywhere with the free Office Web Apps.

Word for Mac 2011: Create visually rich newsletters, brochures, and documents in Publishing Layout view.

Excel for Mac 2011: Spot trends with new Sparklines, small charts that fit in a single cell.

PowerPoint for Mac 2011: Move beyond the conference room and broadcast your presentations online.
What’s New and Improved
  • Ribbon: Access favorite commands quickly, and personalize your workspace
  • Office Web Apps: Post, edit, and share files from virtually anywhere
  • Coauthoring: Simultaneously edit a file with authors in multiple locations
  • Template Gallery: Visually select the perfect template for your next project
  • Photo Editing: Remove backgrounds or add color filters right within PowerPoint
  • Full Screen View: Use full screen to maximize space for reading and writing
  • Presentation Broadcast: Broadcast a presentation instantly online, even to people without PowerPoint
  • Improved Publishing Layout View: Create visually rich newsletters, brochures, and documents easily
  • Sparklines: Create small charts in a single cell to discover patterns in your data
  • Visual Basic Support: Automate repetitive tasks by programming your favorite commands
  • Dynamic Reordering: Rearrange layers of text, photos, and graphics quickly

Requires a Windows Live® ID, internet connection and supported browser.
Included Programs and Top Features
Microsoft Office for Mac adds rich new features to the familiar Office applications you already know, helping you to manage your home and schoolwork the way you want. Microsoft Office for Mac Home and Student 2011 is licensed for home and student use on 1 (one) Mac and is not intended for commercial use. It includes:p
Word for Mac 2011
Powerful writing tools help you create outstanding documents, then store, edit, and share your work easily on the web.
  • Create visually rich newsletters, brochures, and documents in Publishing Layout view
  • Instantly see styles applied in your document with Visual Styles
  • Work in Full Screen view to maximize space for reading and writing documents
  • Rearrange layers of text, photos, and graphics quickly with Dynamic Reordering
  • View, edit, store, and share documents online with the Word Web App on Windows Live SkyDrive
  • Share and coauthor Word documents with virtually anyone, whether they’re using Office on a Mac or PC

Excel for Mac 2011
Clarify your financial picture with easy-to-analyze spreadsheets you can post online to view, edit, share, or coauthor with your team from virtually anywhere.
  • Clarify your data using Conditional Formatting with icons, data bars, and color scales
  • Spot trends with new Sparklines, small charts that fit in a single cell
  • Spend more time analyzing data and less time sifting through it with PivotTables
  • Organize, filter, and format related data with Excel tables
  • Increase efficiency and save time by automating repetitive tasks using Visual Basic
  • View, edit, store, and share spreadsheets online with the Excel Web App on Windows Live SkyDrive
  • Share and coauthor Excel spreadsheets with virtually anyone, whether they’re using Office on a Mac or PC

PowerPoint for Mac 2011
Create powerful, professional presentations that engage and inspire your audience, and present online as effectively as in person.
  • Remove backgrounds or add color filters to your photos right within PowerPoint
  • Move beyond the conference room and broadcast your presentations online
  • Rearrange layers of text, photos, and graphics quickly with Dynamic Reordering
  • Rehearse, check your timing, and take notes in Presenter View
  • View, edit, store, and share Office documents online with the PowerPoint Web App on Windows Live® SkyDrive
  • Share and coauthor PowerPoint presentations with virtually anyone, whether they’re using Office on a Mac or PC

Requires a Windows Live® ID, internet connection and supported browser.
System Requirements
To run Microsoft Office for Mac Home and Student 2011, your computer must meet the following system requirements:
  • A Mac computer with an Intel processor
  • Mac OS X version 10.5.8 or later
  • 1 GB of RAM recommended
  • 2.5 GB of available hard disk space
  • HFS+ hard disk format (also known as Mac OS Extended or HFS Plus)
  • DVD drive or connection to a local area network (if installing over a network)
  • 1280 x 800 or higher resolution monitor

Additional items or services are required to use some features
  • Certain online functionality requires a Windows Live ID
  • Certain features require Internet access (fees may apply)

Manufacturer's Description
Microsoft Office for Mac Home and Student 2011 includes Word for Mac, PowerPoint for Mac, Excel for Mac and Messenger for Mac.Microsoft Office for Mac offers a suite of programs designed to help you manage your everyday tasks at the office, at home, and at school more productively. Now you can create professional documents, useful spreadsheets, compelling presentations, and organize your personal information with ease. Built specifically for the Mac OS X operating system it is designed to help you work smarter, not harder, let you quickly add artistic touches to all your office documents, be more compatible with Windows programs.

 

Office for Mac 2011, Home and Student Edition (1 User, 1Mac)

 

Technical Details

  • Licensed for home and student use on 1 (one) Mac; not for use in any commercial, non-profit, or revenue generating business activities, or by any government organisation
  • Office for Mac 2011 includes Mac versions of Word 2011, Excel 2011, and PowerPoint 2011; the most familiar and trusted productivity applications used around the world at home, school, and business
  • Reliable compatibility with the over 1 billion Macs and PCs running Office worldwide ensures you have the right tools to create, share, and collaborate with virtually anyone, anywhere, with no worries
  • Office for Mac 2011 offers top-of-the-line software with the most complete feature set, so you can deliver impressive, professional-looking documents and presentations
  • Office Web App support: New Office Web Apps let you post, access, edit, and share Office documents from where you want with nearly any computer with a browser; and coauthor a document with multiple people in multiple locations.1
  • Also includes Messenger for Mac 8 enabling you to communicate in real time with audio and video support, and Remote Desktop for Mac 2 so you can drive your Windows-based PC from your Mac
  • Requires a Windows Live ID, internet connection and supported browser. There are differences between features of the Office Web Apps and the Office 2011 applications.
Office for Mac 2011, Home and Student Edition (1 User, 1Mac)

Customer Reviews


Length:: 5:31 Mins
It's that time again... Office:Mac has a new release under its belt for the upcoming 2 years with 2011, a much needed update to Microsoft's productivity software suite.
If you're here, then you may already own Office:Mac 2008 and I'm sure thoughts will be mixed. The software is a package that ultimately had potential, but various attributes let it down such as, the fact that Microsoft tell you to update the programs every month with 'Critical Updates' to fix 'Vulnerability Issues'. When such is the case, why release a product thats updates equate to a larger size than the original installation?
Rest assured however that 2011 is a smoother ride. Whats more, its not even a 64bit package, but I think they can be forgiven on this front since 64bit technology only enhances software thats uses lots and lots of RAM. 2011 is a little lighter on this front. Upon working on each application for half and hour, the average memory sum was around 90mb, so I'm happy that Microsoft have done at least one thing right.
It doesn't stop there though, because the entire package has seen modernisation. The biggest change of all is the Ribbon interface - something that I completely despise on the Windows port of this software, yet on Office:Mac 2011, i'm seriously impressed. The Ribbon, although looking similar in features, is more accomplished on the Mac version since it labels more of the icons and makes the features more 'obvious'. One of the most idiotic aspects of Office for Windows is that the icons on the Ribbon are all too often completely ambiguous.
Whats more, the 'levels' on the Ribbon are denoted clearer, and they are completely customiseable - unlike on the Windows version, were only the 'block' of features could be swapped around. Such levels as Home, Layout, Document Elements, Tables and Charts are named the same on Windows, but as was said earlier, its features are better assigned and more obvious to which level they occur at.
This Home and Student Edition arrives with;
Word - Hey, its for word processing! And also retains the great features of 2008 such as Notebook Layout View for at University lectures.
Excel - The spreadsheet application thats more fun if you can do maths. I'm being flippant there - Excel has always been useful for any student.
PowerPoint - Probably the most important application these days, and the one that suggests 'Flashier will get you more marks'. If such is the case, 2011 doesn't disappoint!
Outlook...
... Yes, Outlook. According to the back of the Home and Student Edition box, Outlook is not even listed as being in the package - only available with the Home and Business Edition...
... oh wait, Microsoft are just teasing you! You've installed the application, click to launch it and then you're asked if you'd like to upgrade to the Home and Business Edition. Nice move Bill! Though if I wanted Outlook specifically, then surely I'd have just bought the Business Edition anyway? Silly little man, I'll keep my money.
Hey, at least you get the new Microsoft Messenger (MSN) bundled for free, and its fairly 'good'. Be aware of the Video feature though, its barely improved from the Beta version of this program.
As far as compatibility is concerned [taking Word as an example] .DOCX files can be exchanged from Windows to Mac without a single hitch, so kudo's to both parties for getting that right. Standard .DOC files work fine too of course, though remember that files from Apples iWork that are saved in its own preliminary format [e.g Pages] cannot be imported into Microsoft Office. To import from iWork to Office, you will need to change the File Type upon saving/copying the document. Easy peasy! Whats more, the document elements of Office:Mac 2011 mirror those of Windows Office exactly, so if you're exchanging files between machines, they will continue to look the same. This has been a major plus for myself and fellow students of got this product as library networks are normally always Windows based, whilst we use MacBooks.
If you own iWork or are torn between Office and the former, then you should be made aware of not just the compatibility facts listed above, but the basic pro's and con's of between the two package. As I see, these for iWork are;
+ Simpler interfaces. The best example is 'Pages' (the equivalent of Word), which is literally just a sheet of paper with the toolbar built in. On Word, you still have the ancient grey background behind the document, for some reason.
+ Best performance. It would have to be of course - It's been designed by Apple for their own machines, and it tells.
+ More professional presentations in 'Keynote', Apples equivalent of PowerPoint. The degree of control you have is unquestionable.
+ Hey, its cheaper!
- File sizes are much larger. Whereas a Word document may be a mere 17kb, a Pages document would be around 150kb.
- 'Numbers', the Apple equivalent of Excel, just isn't as in depth and lacks many features.
- Updates to the release of the software are more scarce than Office.
These only a few points, so its up to you to make your mind up.
While there are no radical enhancements that would make you want to rush out and buy 2011, its worth noting that it's biggest feature is quite simply the performance. This says a lot about how Microsoft have failed so often in the past, so I admire the fact that they've taken 2011 and focussed on it being a slicker experience. The new layouts only improve your productivity further, but aside from this performance and interface, Office is just as helpful as its always been. I'd almost go as far as saying that were moving away from innovation and going into the territory of bloating the software with features that you'll likely never use, but to just say that the product is 'new and improved'.
The only major thumbs down I can give is to PowerPoint, which I would argue is worse than the previous edition. Moving objects and text-boxes has been made more difficult due to the fact that, to 'Select' a text-box, you have to hover carefully over the box until the 4-axis arrow cursor appears, because if you click once inside the box and try to drag, it simply goes straight to the editing mode. Past editions have let you just click and drag, with a double-click to edit, so this reversal is more time consuming and annoying. The performance is also more sluggish compared to the other programs. You can't preview animations without first applying them, and there is regularly delays in making some actions. Transitions aren't as smooth, and the interface is generally a slight step backwards. This is a pity, for a program which boasts so much has had the spark removed from it.
A final gripe comes with Microsofts latest pricing strategy for the Office:Mac series, something that I've never given too much thought in the past since the Student/Home Editions have contained 2 or 3 License Codes. For the 2011 Edition, the Home and Student Edition no longer has multiple licenses - just the one key - meaning for the same price as past releases, you can only install it on one computer. This is something which I think is quite poor, given how much this product is worth. For students like myself who often work between a home computer and a laptop, I'm not impressed that Microsoft don't even bundle an extra key incase anything goes wrong with your primary system.
On the other hand, Apple have never had 'licensing' control over iWork - you simply have a key and that will work many times over, allowing you to place it any number of machines. What's more, iWork is cheaper, and with the upcoming release of 'Mac App Store' [an Apple program that allows you to download software for your Mac], you're going to be enabled to download those iWork programs for a fraction of the price. Separately.
Now, if only Microsoft could plagiarize useful features like these, rather than just templates...
8/10 - A big improvement over 2008, but unless you're using these programs on a regular basis, the upgrade may not be value for money.
[PowerPoint is still compatible with Apple Remotes, for use with slide action]

I recently changed to using a Mac after using PC's and Word based documents for years. I love my Mac and in fact found the transition to Pages, Numbers etc extremely easy and they were a breeze to use.
However, a number of issues continually occurred when documents were being sent backwards and forwards to colleagues. For instance, essential formatting was being lost.
I very reluctantly had to concede that for some specific work related tasks, Word for Mac was pretty well a necessity as a lot of time was being wasted trying to sort out the problems encountered.
It loaded from disc quite easily - although it took far longer than I anticipated.
It's not my intention to use Powerpoint or Excel as I'm very happy with the Apple software. Word will be used when required for work purposes and it does what is expected of it.
I previously worked with Word 2007 and this is obviously more up to date.
While it does have some useful tricks, I really do feel I have literally been dragged kicking and screaming back to using Microsoft software!
Surely there must be a way of seamlessly integrating documents for use on either system?
Perhaps if I had a bit more patience our IT guys would have worked through the problems and found a fix - but at the end of the day, time is money so it worked out more cost effective just to buy this.
It seems to work well and obviously serves its purpose so would gain five stars for that BUT I've reduced to four stars as I really do feel forced into buying it!

 

Office for Mac 2011, Home and Student Edition (1 User, 1Mac)

 

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