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Introduction to
MS-Office 2010

First noticeable thing is
that performance has improved a lot compared to Office 2007. Just as
with Windows 7, Office 2010 not only requires the same resources as
requested Office 2007 to run, but the same resources to work better
than its predecessor. And now there are 64-bit versions also helpful
when using an operating system of this kind.
The ribbon introduced in Office 2007 is here to stay, but now it has
the Windows 7 styling.
Instead of the same round Office icon marking the Office menu (which
replaces the File menu and isn't obviously a menu), there's a button
in each app that looks like the buttons for the different tabs on
the ribbon, in the signature color of that application (green for
Excel, blue for Word, red for PowerPoint, yellow for Outlook and so
on).

Picture : New Office
Button in Office 2010 which give details Information
That's much more like the menus in the RC versions of Paint and
WordPad, and rather easier to spot.
The app windows also get their window menus back (they were removed
in Office 2007); these use the icon for each app and let you
restore, move, size, minimize, maximize or close the window. They're
very minor changes, but they take Office some way back towards the
standard Windows user interface.
Office 2010 ribbon
The Office 2010 ribbon gets the flatter Windows 7 look (like the
Windows 7 taskbar); there are no major changes visible in most apps,
although you can spot new icons for the indent settings on Word's
Home tab (they look more like moving a text box) and text
orientation in Excel.
Other icons are grouped into sections for responding to and deleting
messages, applying actions (Move, Rules and similar), setting flags
(including mark as read or unread) or categories and searching in
various ways.
One Best this For MS-CIT
is in PowerPoint it was difficult to find a name of page transaction
but its now easy as name are shown below effect symbol, its really
good news for Us...

Name Below
Transaction.. Good...Thanks to Microsoft...
Other New Features
Translation Tool now comes pre-installed (and before we could only
use them after you have installed an add-on for Windows Live
Translator), new SmartArt templates that have been added, and new
animations and transitions in PowerPoint. In addition, we have Word
2010 that allows us to save files directly to SharePoint sites, and
there is native support for open and save documents in ODF format,
along with the ability to export documents to PDF (without
installing any add-on ).
Also, the context menus for editing applications (Word, Excel,
PowerPoint, etc) are now more powerful and incorporating the Live
Preview technology previously only available if used in the Ribbon.
This technology allows us to see the results of the edit option to
just put your mouse over them. For example, now simply move the
mouse over buttons as “Paste and preserve format” and “Paste text
only” to see the difference between the two, or move the mouse over
different types of bullets to see how the text is each. Furthermore,
the context menu will become semi-transparent while using the Live
Preview, to see clearly how the document with each option.
Protected Mode – Security feature that works every time you open a
document downloaded from Internet. What it does is lock the file so
that we can not do any work without first edition we have explicitly
allowed (something similar to what Windows Vista / 7 with the files
you have downloaded from the web).
Friends if want to download
Office 2010
Click Here |