Subscribe to RSS Feed

Microsoft Office Home and Business 2010 (Disc Version)

41OiGcLHVTL. SL160  Microsoft Office Home and Business 2010 (Disc Version)

  • New photo, video, and text effects for creating standout documents and presentations
  • New communication tools in Outlook 2010 to help you stay in touch and organized
  • Makes it easier to manage things in the office, at home, or in between
  • Clarify and manage your financial data with new and improved analysis tools, charts, templates and color formatting in Excel 2010.
  • The new Microsoft Office Backstage view replaces the traditional File menu found on previous versions of Microsoft Office.
  • This makes it easier to navigate tasks, as well as access and manage files.

Microsoft Office 2010 Home and Business – 32/64-bit T5D-00417 230Microsoft Office Home and Business 2010 brings together the roles of managing a business, running a household and helping with homework. Get the benefits of all the programs you need to be productive including Microsoft Outlook 2010–so you can tackle your busy day efficiently with powerful email, scheduling and social networking tools to keep your life and work in sync. Traditional Disc Version This version of Microsoft Office Pr

buynow big Microsoft Office Home and Business 2010 (Disc Version)

List Price: $ 279.99

Price:

Find More Products

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

3 Responses to Microsoft Office Home and Business 2010 (Disc Version)

  1. Surgery100 "ADJ" on January 6, 2012 at 3:11 pm
    205 of 215 people found the following review helpful:
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    A whole lot of polishing make it an efficient, worhtwhile upgrade, June 16, 2010
    By 
    Surgery100 “ADJ” (Washington, DC) –
    This review is from: Microsoft Office Home and Business 2010 (Disc Version) (DVD-ROM)

    I’ve had an opportunity to use Office 2010 Beta edition for a couple of months now and now that I see the full, final, edition I can say that this is a very worthwhile upgrade. First things first, I am not a techie. I am someone who uses Word, Excel and PowerPoint on a very regular basis, who really liked some of the changes in Office 2007 but who thought some things needed tweaking, so when given the opportunity for the beta edition I jumped on it and have not been disappointed. Office 2010 is to Office 2007 what Windows 7 was to Vista; that is, there are not many breakthrough, drastically different features, but a whole lot of polishing and cleanup to make it easier and more efficient. Overall, the program seems to run faster, incorporates many of the most commonly used options and makes them more accessible (eliminating many dialog boxes and tabs) and allows for more customization.

    At first glance it looks very much like its predecessor, the ribbon is back and it is now also found on OneNote. There are plenty of sites that will give you a play-by-play on all the features available in this new version, so I’m just going to mention some of the biggest improvements that I’ve seen.
    1) The biggest change is the addition of the web apps. It may not be a true direct competitor to google docs, but it allows for easier sharing of documents, as well as making your documents more accessible.
    2) The ribbon is back and it now includes the “File” option and a new feature called “Backstage view.” Backstage view incorporates the most commonly used actions in one place (yay! no more dialog boxes with tabs). You get the usual open, save and print, but you also get several templates for new documents, print layouts and ways to share your work, all without dialog boxes and tabs, everything is much more easily accessible.
    3) Another new feature is that the ribbon is now customizable so you can organize it according to your needs.
    4) There is a Paste Preview which lets you switch between paste options so you can make sure that your work will be formatted correctly.

    Changes in PowerPoint.
    You can now edit video directly on PowerPoint. You can trim a video, add effects, fades and even triggers for animations for the presentation. Another new feature is that you can add effects and edit images without the need for third party software.

    Changes in Word.
    One nifty new feature in Word is called “Navigation pane,” which replaces the old document map. It incorporates minor changes in design that make big changes in productivity and ease of use. It allows you to quickly rearrange the document. Take for example a document with several headings/sections. The Navigation pane provides a list of all the headings. The headings are live, so you can drag them up or down, thus rearranging the document. It also incorporates most of the functions that used to be available in the “Find” dialog box but now they are all visible so you don’t have to go digging through several menus to find the option that you need.

    Changes in Excel.
    Most of the changes in Excel deal with very large datasets. There is a new PowerPivot add-in which works great if you are dealing with a very large dataset that does not fit in one Excel spreadsheet. PowerPivot pulls the data from multiple sources (several Excel spreadsheets for instance) to analyze it.

    Changes in Outlook.
    There is a ribbon, and this makes for a huge improvement. You can turn long email threads into conversations so you can find information from a specific participant without having to read entire threads. You can also filter out or ignore entire threads on a particular subject, including future emails. Be careful though, you can unknowingly eliminate important future emails because they have the same subject title as a conversation you ignored in the past.

    Summary:
    Overall this is one well planned and executed upgrade that essentially takes all the promises of Office 2007 and makes them a reality. Yes, some things are different, and it will take some getting used to; but, once you realize the improvement in efficiency you’ll agree that the changes are mostly for the positive.

    Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 

    Was this review helpful to you? Yes
    No

  2. Chad386 on January 6, 2012 at 3:53 pm
    142 of 150 people found the following review helpful:
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Moving from Office 2003, this is a really big deal., June 15, 2010
    By 
    Chad386
    Amazon Verified Purchase(http://www.amazon.com/gp/community-help/amazon-verified-purchase/184-4060695-4539249', ‘AmazonHelp’, ‘width=400,height=500,resizable=1,scrollbars=1,toolbar=0,status=1′);return false; “>What’s this?)
    This review is from: Microsoft Office Home and Business 2010 (Disc Version) (DVD-ROM)

    I’m coming from OLD versions of these applications. I’m ashamed to say I was still using a version of Word 2002 on one of my computers…Yikes! I’ve been using Mozilla’s excellent (and free) Thunderbird client for many years.

    So the standout here for me, is Outlook. I honestly can’t figure how I ever effectively used email before. If you’ve ever tried to configure Thunderbird for gmail access using either POP or IMAP, it is a multi-step process (by multi, I mean like 22 steps) to get to the end. Complete with re-mapping ports, changing TLS and server configurations, the whole deal. I could always get it to work, eventually, and once it’s set, it just works after that. You only had to go through that process once. But since I do OS re-installs somewhat regularly, I had to go through this Thunderbird “initialization” process many, many times.

    So I download the Office 2010 Beta. (the full beta that installs on your hdd, not the virtualization beta which was garbage and took forever to load up).

    It asks me some pointed questions about my gmail account. Literally like 2 questions: my email address and my password. There might have been one other question or 2, but I don’t think so. Outlook basically configured itself instantly after I entered my information, no port mapping or any of that other stuff. It just worked and immediately started synchronizing my folders. This was impressive in and of itself, but the conversation feature was great as well, where Outlook keeps threaded replies under one conversation heading. It just streamlines things and makes it much better. (note: I’ve discovered that the conversation feature “confused” a lot of users; it has therefore been disabled in the final product. Go to your view section of your ribbon and click the box “show as conversations” to re-enable. I honestly don’t understand how this could be confusing, but ok. Just turn it on, any logic-minded person will like it.)

    The Search option is invaluable as well. It acts like an index-able search and starts returning results as you type. I had a product that had failed on me, but that also had a 3 year warranty that was nearing expiration. I typed in the name of the product and outlook finds all pertinent messages in my Gmail account from 32 months ago…instantly. (actually before I even finished typing its name). Thunderbird has not replicated this functionality in any meaningful way, not even close. Normally I would be combing through pages and pages of emails trying to find the one I needed. This little feature has saved me so much time, I can’t even tell you. And I just stumbled upon it, which makes it even better. You can type anything in this box: email addresses, names, words that may only appear in the subject or body. It finds it all instantly as you type.

    So the big deal here is something I haven’t mentioned which is called the Ribbon interface. This is the fancy menu-ing system at the top of each application. So where you would normally have static menu buttons as any browser/application does, the ribbon options change based on which heading you click. This is cool and is pretty well standardized between applications. Each application obviously has different needs for the major headings, but the functionality is the same. Outlook is a visually impressive app as compared to Thunderbird. Even my wife noticed something was different when she saw it on my screen for the 1st time. (I still had Thunderbird installed on her computer.) Thunderbird looks absolutely midieval in comparison. After months of using the Office 2010 beta, I was on my wife’s computer and loaded up Thunderbird. The difference is big.

    Though I have never used Outlook 2007, I have read this is a major upgrade in every way over it, and no question over Outlook 2003. I also loved the new Calendar system, again much better than what I used to with Thunderbird, which for a long time was an extra plugin, called Sunbird.

    The other standout in my opinion is Word 2010. This is still the yardstick by which other word processors are measured. It’s got insane functionality and can do things that I will probably never, ever have a need for. This seems to be more of several, tiny optimizations that are visible after a few weeks of use. Word 2007 also had the ribbon UI, but this has been refined. Word 2010′s search/navigation functionality has been drastically improved: this is especially handy for long/multi-page documents. All the functionality you could ever want in a word processor is here and it is also a beautiful app as compared to something like Google docs or Open Office. Not picking on them or anything, because obviously you’re gonna get more for a paid app vs. a free one. I have WordPerfect at work, and I can barely stand to use it in comparison. Not sure why, but no one can touch Microsoft as far as…

    Read more

    Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 

    Was this review helpful to you? Yes
    No

  3. Anncamas on January 6, 2012 at 3:54 pm
    68 of 77 people found the following review helpful:
    3.0 out of 5 stars
    Has potential but transferring pst files still a pain in the…., June 20, 2010
    By 
    Anncamas (Camas, WA USA) –
    This review is from: Microsoft Office Home and Business 2010 (Disc Version) (DVD-ROM)

    I had the full version of Office 2003 and the student version of 2007 without Outlook. I bought the home/business version since it was time to upgrade Outlook. I cannot comment on the other programs yet because 2 days later and about 4 hours of wasted time, I am still trying to export my 2003 Outlook e-mail data files from my desktop to my laptop which has 2010 loaded. This seemed prudent before upgrading my desktop that I primarily use (work from home full time). About the only good thing I can say about the transfer is that the three versions are compatible for pst file transfer, unlike the upgrade from 2002 to 2003, which was not. I tried calling support and while 3 months if free with this H&B retail version, it appears that it’s all offshore now which is disappointing given the cost of “upgrading.”

    Unlike many other users, I don’t mind the price (esp Amazons) and prefer a clean install in case I want to load on a computer with no previous version. However, the cost should include support from Americans (or at least Canadian: ) So far, support has been of no help, either on the phone or in the knowledge base which gives me the choice of backing up the whole pst file and then copying (did not work) or exporting data file by file (had to break up my inbox in to sub files). Yet they keep sending me e-mails asking if my problem is resolved…so they can close it out.

    Microsoft: by now transferring pst files should be a 5 minute thing for those of us not on exchange (don’t know if that’s any better). If phone support was better, I would say that some people might benefit from buying the professional version which comes with one year of support instead of 90 days…cheaper than a bunch of calls to M. Some day I will update my review if I ever get out of Outlook : )

    PS to the guy who complained that 64 bit is not compatible with his computer; unless you are a computer pro or wiz, load 32 on your 64 bit computer using the typical install (which I loaded on both computers – have one of each – Vista 32 and 7 64) since 64 does not work with all applications and thus, not worth the small increase in processing speed. I had to hunt online to figure this out as Microsoft does not make it clear.

    Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 

    Was this review helpful to you? Yes
    No

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*


Spam Protection by WP-SpamFree

Security Code:


 Powered by Max Banner Ads 

Powered by Yahoo! Answers

Powered by Yahoo! Answers