Today at its Wordwide Partner Conference in New Orleans, Microsoft announced that the Microsoft Office suite has reached the 'technical preview' milestone, and that starting today the company will open up the Office beta program to a larger number of users. While a new version of Office is obviously big news for a lot of users, the really interesting part of the announcement is that Microsoft is also releasing more details about the Office Web applications - which are lightweight, browser-based versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote (Microsoft's note-taking tool). Beta testers can expect invites for the Office Web applications to go out in August.
We got a chance to talk to Takeshi Numoto, the corporate vice president of the Microsoft Office Product Management Group, last week. He gave us more information about the Office Web applications. The web-based applications were designed to work on any browser and should even work on most mobile browsers. While some functions will only be available when Microsoft's Silverlight is available on a machine, Silverlight is not a requirement to run most features of the web applications. Numoto stressed that the apps will run on Firefox, Safari, and, obviously, IE, though Google's Chrome is suspiciously absent from this list (Stephen Elop, the head of the Office division explains why at the end of this interview).
The web applications will be tied in closely with the desktop clients, and the online storage will be managed through SkyDrive. For consumers, the web apps will be hosted on Windows Live and will be available for free, although Numoto remained tight-lipped about possible plans to monetize the apps through advertising. We could only get him to acknowledge that Microsoft was indeed 'experimenting' with various options, which we can only assume includes advertising.
Another important aspect, which also ties in with a feature that Microsoft is stressing in the desktop applications of the Office suite, is the ability to collaborate on any document with various users simultaneously - including those using the web applications. While we haven't seen this in action, having a rich-text editor at hand for real-time collaboration on Word and PowerPoint documents is going to be a very exciting feature for a lot of users (however some third-party service providers who currently offer similar services will probably not be happy about this).
For enterprises, Microsoft will offer two solutions. One will be hosted as part of Microsoft's Online Services. Another version, however, will be available for companies to host on their own servers on top of SharePoint. For enterprises, especially those that have long felt that cloud computing wasn't for them, this self-hosted version of the browser-based Office suite is going to be a very attractive solution, especially considering that all of Microsoft's 90 million Office annuity customers will get access to this version as a regular part of the updates that come with these volume licenses.
As Numoto told us, Microsoft believes that this will allow the company to differentiate itself from other companies that offer office solutions in the cloud. While Takeshi was careful not to mention any competitors by name, it is obvious that this is aimed at Google (and perhaps less so, startups like Zoho and ThinkFree).
Clearly, this release will be a major deal for consumers and enterprises. A free version of the browser-based Office application that easily syncs with the desktop version and allows collaboration between users on both systems is going to be a big deal.
The desktop apps obviously also got a make-over. But compared to the shift to Office 2007, the current release features only minor cosmetic updates from what we have seen so far. The integration of the web apps looks like the most exciting addition, as well as the ribbon interface becoming standard across all the applications. Also, Microsoft is putting a lot of emphasis on real-time collaboration, and different users can now edit documents simultaneously. Alhough Numote emphasized that all edits can be reversed.
Numoto also stressed the Office team focused on improving some of the most often used features. As an example, he told us that cut and paste is obviously one of the most popular features in Office, but that Microsoft found that after pasting something into a document, the key that was used the most often afterward was 'delete.' In order to improve the cut and paste process, Office will now feature a 'cut and paste preview,' similar to the feature that Office 2007 already offers for changing styles and fonts, for example.
Outlook aficionados will also be happy to hear that the email client will now feature an option to 'ignore' unwanted threads.
While the Technical Preview, which was announced today, will only be available for a limited number of users, the beta program will be open to everybody. Microsoft expects to ship the final version of Office 2010 in the first half of 2010.
So far, we haven't had a chance to actually test-drive the desktop or web apps ourselves, but you can expect an in-depth review from us once we get access to the beta.
Comments
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Whoah... that "New Features" video is charming... I think it's an inevitable move, and not exactly before time. At best: "meh", at worst: "Too late".
Posted by: https://creativecommons.net/zach/
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July 13, 2009 6:43 AM
What a joke - I go two error loading this page because of dependencies on Silverlight and webtrends proprietary plug-ins.
Even the sneak peek is FAIL. Same old Microsoft.
Bonus!
Blue screen of Death 100 feet tall on the marquee at the Paris hotel in Vegas:
http://failblog.org/2009/07/12/casino-marquee-fail/
Really awesome tools and I'm thrilled about all the possible scenarios (espec. witj collaboration and web apps). You can find all released videos for all Office 2010 products here: http://www.uxpassion.com/2009/07/office-2010-overview-videos-with-office-cloud-web-applications/
This time they come out with some compelling features.. Its true that competition takes out the best from you…!!
Speaking as Plutext, a third party service provider which allows collaboration within Word (and from a Java Web Start client), nothing I have seen today on the Office Web Applications / collaboration front comes as a surprise^ (given the previous announcements 10 months ago).
Strategically, we target businesses and governments which use Alfresco and don't want Sharepoint. There are many businesses around which are wary of server-side lockin, and would prefer to use open web technologies.
^ Instead of surprise, we have confusion: there is a paragraph or 2 in the Elop interview you link to which seems to suggest that collaboration via the Office Web Applications may be limited as compared to the desktop applications. Techcrunch's report with Chris Bryant says there is NO web-based collaboration (which would be a surprise); VentureBeat's says the opposite. Maybe you only get collaboration via the web based apps if you have Sharepoint. Anyone able to clarify?
One way or another, it looks like you'll have to have Office 2010 (rather than 2007 say) to do collaboration the Microsoft way.
Further to my earlier comment, in Robert Scoble's Is Office 2010 the world’s largest JavaScript application?, at 5.55 mins, Chris Bryant explains that the excel web app can do co-authoring, but that for word and ppt documents, co-authoring is solely "driven on the client".
So there you are, that is a surprise!
Great article, Frederic! Make sure to check out the new Office 2010 videos on the Office Facebook Page to learn more about exciting features: http://www.facebook.com/s.php?q=microsoft+office&init=q&sid=0#/microsoftoffice?v=app_17037175766&viewas=7300773
For more information and conversation, become a fan on Facebook and follow us on Twitter (@Office).
Cheers,
Kate
MSFT Office Outreach Team