In spite of being viewed as the "other guys" in some Mac users' minds,
Microsoft has generally put out an excellent productivity suite for the Mac with
Microsoft Office. Though the latest package is still not on par with the Windows
version (you get only the four main programs--a big difference when you consider
the Windows version has 10), Microsoft made a big leap with this latest version
for the Mac in several other ways. Not only has it nearly reached feature parity
(and cross compatibility) with the Mac counterparts to Word, Excel, and
PowerPoint, but it has finally added Outlook, the e-mail and scheduling client
Mac business fans have been clamoring for for years.
Once we dug deep into the feature set of Office 2011 for Mac, we saw there
were several enhancements that made the whole suite better, and some of the
niftier tweaks are even Mac-exclusive. Certainly many Mac users will look first
at Apple's iWork for a productivity suite, and it is a great office suite in its
own right. But if you work with primarily Windows users who use Office, it's
tough to beat the automatic compatibility of using the same programs. Add the
ease of compatibility with a strong feature set across the entire suite and you
have a desktop office package that's almost a must-have in both large and small
businesses, and even home productivity settings.
One of the major new changes to the suite (on the Windows side, too) is the
ability to collaborate and share your work using Web apps. New Coauthoring
requires that you use SharePoint Foundation 2010 for enterprise use, but for
personal or small businesses, you can save and access files over SkyDrive (25GB
of available online storage) on Windows Live with a free registration.
All of the new tweaks to the interface and each of the apps in the suite make
Office 2011 for Mac a great option, but with the rise of cloud-based computing
and online office suites like Google Docs, we wonder how long the big desktop
apps like Office will remain on top. This latest Office client for Mac is
definitely a solid offering, but how long can Microsoft hold on to its
dominance?
Microsoft Office 2011 for Mac (screenshots)
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Office 2011 for Mac editions
We reviewed Office 2011 Home and Business,
which costs $199 for a single install or $279 for three installs if you want to
put it on three computers at home or work. This suite includes Word, Excel,
PowerPoint, and Outlook. If you don't need a business-level desktop e-mail
client, you should opt for the Home and Student version (at $119 for a single
install and $149 for three installs), which includes just Word, Excel, and
PowerPoint. Unfortunately, there is no upgrade pricing for Microsoft Office 2011
for Mac because Microsoft found that most people buy Office when they buy a new
computer and there was little interest
in carrying upgrades at retail outlets.
Setup
The installation for Office 2011 for Mac is quite painless. Just
like any other software, you'll be asked for permission to make changes to your
system, then it's only about 10 minutes install time (depending on the speed of
your Mac). Like a lot of software these days, you'll need to have at least Mac
OS X 10.5 Leopard to use all the features in the Office 2011 suite.
Interface
The Ribbon has returned as the unifying interface component
across all the apps in the suite. Though Microsoft has met some resistance from
users on both platforms for this particular feature, we think once people get
used to the flexibility of the Ribbon it will save them an enormous amount of
time. Rather than digging through menus and scrolling through palettes, the
Ribbon uses tabs that display commands relevant to a given task. As an example,
clicking on an image in Word, PowerPoint, or Excel will change the tabs in the
Ribbon to image-related tasks so you can make changes quickly without having to
search through menus. If you still just can't get used to the Ribbon, in Office
2011 for Mac, you can turn it off and use regular drop-down menus (an option
that several Windows users probably wish they had). Still, we recommend taking
the time to learn the Ribbon as an investment that will save you more time in
the future.
Template galleries
One of the great things about today's office suites is
that, with most documents, you don't have to start from scratch. Office 2011 for
Mac features an enormous number of templates in the Template Galleries for Word,
PowerPoint, and Excel. Choose among great-looking resumes and newsletters,
complex photo catalogs, and calendar layouts, which let you fill in your
information without the need for extra formatting. Even if the selection in
Office 2011 doesn't have what you're looking for, you can browse more than
10,000 user-generated templates and filter by category or keywords to get
exactly what you want. From there you can make customizations to your template
to make the project your own. We particularly like the ability to mouse-over
templates to view multiple-page layouts; it saves you a lot of time to not have
to open each template to see what type of elements are used on each page.
Media Browser
Whether you're making a brochure, a newsletter, or a
business presentation, you're going to want eye-catching multimedia to make your
project pop. In Office 2008 this meant you would be searching through the object
palette of the toolbox or sifting through your media folders in the Finder. The
new Media Browser gives you a centralized location to browse images, video,
iMovie projects, iPhoto libraries, and your music (from iTunes) so you can grab
what you need quickly whether you are in Word, PowerPoint, Outlook, or Excel. If
you don't have time to sift through each of the categories, you can do a quick
search by keyword to get what you want. The suite is filled with time-saving
shortcuts like these and we think it shows that the Mac team at Microsoft has
been listening to users.
New features
Alongside interface enhancements like the Ribbon across all
four Office applications, Microsoft Office 2011 offers a number of features that
should reduce the time you spend gathering information so you can spend more
time on getting the project done. The new Conversation View in Outlook collapses
e-mail threads so you can view the entire conversation without sifting through
your in-box, for example. Likewise, new image-editing tools in Word, PowerPoint,
and Excel are welcome additions for anyone who works with media in documents and
presentations, obviating the need for third-party editors in most situations.
Many of the new features and tools help you push your presentations and
documents away from the usual bullet points and toward more-engaging visual
presentations.
Outlook 2011
With Outlook now available in Office 2011, several features
are now available to Mac users that used to require separate (and often not
fully compatible) software solutions for previous versions. Now, with a
connection to Exchange Server (2007 or later), Mac users will be able to use
global address books, set up meetings and send meeting requests, and check the
availability of attendees on calendars. Like the latest Windows version of
Outlook, Conversation View is now available for Mac making it easy to find older
messages in a thread by putting them together in one place. You also can click
an arrow on the left edge of the in-box item to instantly expand a thread into
conversation view. According to Microsoft, this feature has gotten a mixed
reaction from users, but we think once people get used to grouping e-mail
threads together in Conversation View, it will save them a lot of time.
Outlook for Mac also makes it easy to get messages from all your e-mail
accounts in one place. New Unified Folders consolidate your various exchange and
online accounts into one in-box folder for easy reading. If you find it
overwhelming, you can always browse each account separately by expanding a
unified folder for individual account access.
Those who are switching from Windows to Mac in a work environment will
appreciate the new ability to seamlessly transfer your Outlook data from a
Windows machine. You'll now be able to import your data files (.PST) created in
Windows Outlook directly to your Mac. But be aware that you'll only be able to
import .PST files from Outlook 2003 or later.
Some of the strengths of using Outlook in the workplace are the scheduling
tools that let you map out your workday. In Outlook 2011 for Mac, some helpful
new features include the ability to preview your calendar directly from a
meeting invitation to see if you're available to attend. A small preview window
shows up in the lower right of an invite showing what you have scheduled around
that time. You'll also be able to stay on top of your busy schedule with the My
Day window that lets you view upcoming appointments. Both of these features are
great time-savers because you won't need to open your full calendar each time
you need to check your schedule.
PowerPoint 2011
Microsoft's PowerPoint is a mainstay for business meetings
and now has added features to make it easy to create engaging visual
presentations rather than the usual boring bullet points.
An improved Presenter view in PowerPoint 2011 gives you all the tools you
need to pull off a flawless performance. As your audience watches, you'll be
able to view the current slide, see what slide is coming up next, view personal
notes for each slide, see the elapsed time for your presentation, and stay on
target with a progress bar to show where you are in your presentation.
To make your visual projects more portable, you'll now be able to embed
movies. In previous versions, you would have needed to include the extra video
files when sharing a presentation, but with this new feature, it's easy to
deliver your presentation as one complete package. You'll also be able to apply
movie styles and effects by clicking on the video and using the appropriate
dynamic tools in the Ribbon, all of which will be retained in your embedded
movie when you share your presentation.
Better slide transitions and animations in Office 2011 for Mac make it easy
to create a pro-level presentation with new 3D effects, and a new tab in the
Ribbon dedicated to Transitions keep them close at hand for on-the-spot
changes.
Possibly the best-looking feature of all in PowerPoint 2011 is exclusive to
the Mac version of Office and very useful for managing complex slides. Now when
you create a slide that includes several graphical elements, you'll be able to
use Dynamic Reordering to move objects between layers. By choosing Dynamic
Reordering in the Arrange menu, you're able to look at graphical elements of
your slide in a 3D layered view, allowing you to move elements toward the front
or back by clicking and dragging them to your preferred location. These features
are available in Word 2011 as well, and will be very useful for managing
graphically complex newsletters or brochures with several graphical
elements.
Finally, to share your presentation with co-workers or clients remotely,
PowerPoint 2011 includes a new feature called Broadcast Slideshow, which is also
exclusive to Office 2011 for Mac. Now, as long as you and your target audience
have an account with Windows Live, you'll be able to quickly send a URL to up to
50 attendees and run through your presentation all without leaving your desk.
Like many of the new features in Office 2011, Broadcast Slideshow makes it easy
to get your work in front of clients and colleagues without a lot of extra
steps.
Excel 2011
The venerable software for spreadsheet creation and management
received a few major improvements in Office 2011. Just like its Windows
counterpart, you'll now be able to add Sparklines to your spreadsheet to make
your data more visual. Sparklines are tiny charts that sit in a single
spreadsheet cell, making it possible to give a visual representation of your
data without needing to refer to a separate chart. With only a few clicks,
you'll be able to add a Sparkline, and then browse through several different
visual styles to give your spreadsheet the exact look you want. It's important
to note that Sparklines will only be available to those who have the latest
versions of Office for both Windows and Mac, so you'll need to know in advance
what version of Office your clients have available.
In keeping with making your projects more visual in Office 2011 for Mac,
Excel 2011 now offers conditional formatting tools to make your spreadsheets
easier to understand, and not just a wall of data. Now, you'll be able to browse
through icon sets to show trends over time and display data bars that make
percentage increases or decreases more visual and easy to understand right in
the spreadsheet. There are more than 40 built-in formats to choose from, but
even if you can't find what you need, you can create your own.
You also will spend less time creating rules for cells with new built-in
quick-select rules. A new Manage Rules dialog box makes it easy to quickly
modify or change rules so you'll spend less time dealing with complex
formulas.
Word 2011
When you need to do some writing, whether it's for a newsletter,
a brochure, or a slick-looking resume, Word 2011 now has a number of features to
help you get your project done quickly. By using the aforementioned Template
Gallery as a starting point, you'll be able to browse through thousands of
premade forms, letters, and layouts to get the right template to fit your
needs.
A new publishing layout view in Word makes arranging elements of your
document much easier, with drag-and-drop functionality that automatically causes
your text to wrap around objects you import. Dynamic guides appear automatically
when you need them, or you can keep specific guides on the desktop while you
work for easy access.
You'll also now be able to manage formatting using a new Visual Styles pane.
Helpful for keeping formatting consistent, the Visual Styles pane shows where in
your document specific styles are applied using a handy numbered and color-coded
system. This is a major improvement over previous versions that often had users
struggling to figure out which parts of the document included specific styles.
Now style changes in documents are laid out in front of you.
One of our favorite features for keeping focused on your work is the new Full
Screen View. With this new Mac-exclusive feature, you'll be able to write or
read without distractions, blocking out everything but the specific tools you
need. You also can customize your workspace with a large selection of
backgrounds and page-turning effects when in reading view. There have been
third-party full-screen reading solutions before now, but having the option for
a distraction-free workspace within Word 2011 is a welcome addition.
Office Web apps and co-authoring
One of the biggest additions to Office
2010 for Windows was the addition of Web apps that let you work on the go. With
Office 2011 for Mac, you'll now be able to easily take your work with you as
long as you have an Internet connection. You can save your Word, PowerPoint, and
Excel files online, then access them from anywhere--even with proper
formatting--and you'll be able to use a slimmed-down, but familiar Office-like
feature set. Best of all, it's easy to switch back and forth between your
desktop and Web versions of your work. You can create your document on your
desktop, for example, then save it to the cloud (via Windows Live SkyDrive or
SharePoint 2010), then make small edits on the road via the Web apps, and then
open them again on your desktop to continue editing. What sets these apps apart
from Google Docs and other services is that your documents and spreadsheets
retain their formatting, giving Office 2011's Web apps a leg up against online
counterparts.
When you need to work on a project with one or more co-workers, new
co-authoring in Word and PowerPoint lets you edit the same document or
presentation with someone in another location. Once connected, you'll be able to
see who is working on the document and you can quickly communicate with them as
long as you have Microsoft Messenger 8 installed on your Mac. Also, with Office
2011's new co-authoring technology, you won't get locked out of a document when
your co-worker goes offline; all of your content is still available so you can
continue working.
Conclusions
Does Office 2011 for Mac offer enough to make it worth the
upgrade from earlier versions? Absolutely. With all the new features that will
save you time from quick image edits within the suite to easy sharing of your
work, and much more, Office 2011 is a huge improvement over Office 2008. New
templates and quick access to video- and image-editing tools are welcome
additions for those who create visual presentations of their content. Serious
spreadsheet power users will like the new features that tie data together in
Excel while making complex data more accessible in the Ribbon and more exciting
visually with Sparklines. Outlook's new conversation-view features for saving
time managing your e-mail could save daily e-mail users a lot of time, if
they're willing to learn the ropes initially.
With it's return in Office 2011, the Ribbon is clearly the preferred method
across the entire suite for getting to features quickly. If you didn't like the
Ribbon in Office 2008, you probably won't like it now, but we think there's
plenty of utility in having a common interface tool across all the apps. If
you're still not convinced the Ribbon is worth your time, you can turn it off
easily and use familiar drop-downs and palettes.
The new Web apps and co-authoring features make Office 2011 a bit better than
Google Docs solutions, letting you easily retain your original formatting and
providing an easy way to switch from online to desktop with only a couple of
clicks. iWork remains a viable alternative and might be a better choice in an
all Mac environment, but if you need compatibility across both Windows and Mac
platforms at your workplace, Office 2011 is the way to go.
Office 2011 is a worthy upgrade for those who desire new templates and visual
styles, better ways of editing multimedia content in publications and
presentations, and easier methods of collaboration. The ability to work from
anywhere with the new Web apps is surely a big reason to upgrade if your job
requires that kind of flexibility.
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