Microsoft office 2010 home and student barcode
This is exactly that download! Thanks, original uploader. My original product key works with this. If yes, then please share it with your friends and family. Now, you do not need to roam here and there for Thursday, January 13, Home Game Technology. Home Uncategorized. January 6, Share on Facebook Share on Twitter. Why trust us? Blocked key. Reviewer: harrymcc. Key not working. I contacted microsoft and came to know new key was generated against this key. Reviewer: firdous - favorite - April 16, Subject: Software old version but key not working.
Reviewer: lhpitn - favorite favorite favorite favorite favorite - March 5, Subject: works grate even without activation thanks a lot, works grate and faster then any other office afterwards. Although the program expired long ago, this site still provides you access to the product key you were issued and the online download you originally used.
Was this reply helpful? Yes No. Sorry this didn't help. Thanks for your feedback. You run the appropriate installer program and submit the 25 character product key when prompted to activate. In PowerPoint, for example, along with helpful image-editing tools more on that later , you can quickly preview how effects will change your image simply by mousing over each effect.
Similarly, as you mouse over different fonts in Word, the document will change in real time before you commit. Office makes this "view before you commit" functionality available in more than just stylistic changes to your document. Some of our favorite new interface features are the paste-preview tools that let you see what pasted content will look like before you commit to adding it to your document. In Word , for example, once you've copied information elsewhere, you can quickly mouse over the paste preview tools to see how content will appear using formatting from the source, merged formatting, or how it will look with the source formatting stripped out.
Alongside interface enhancements like the Ribbon across all Office applications, Microsoft Office offers a number of features that should reduce the time you spend gathering information so you can spend more time on solid presentation.
Simple image and video editing tools are welcome additions to anyone who works with media in their documents and presentations. Many of the new features push your presentations away from the usual bullet points and toward more-engaging visual effects. PowerPoint now provides options for editing video right within the program.
You can trim video so your audience sees only the video content you want them to see. You also can add video effects, fades, and even create video triggers to launch animations during your presentation. These video bookmarks can be used to cue captions at specific points during a video, for example. When it's a static presentation you're working on--such as a publication, newsletter, or pamphlet--Office lets you color-correct and add artistic effects and borders to images so you won't need a third-party image editor.
We found many of these features to be quite intuitive once we were able to track them down in their appropriate Ribbon tabs. Like many features in Office , it's not the functionality that can be challenging, but rather the getting used to the feature that is. Outlook has seen many notable feature improvements in Office , which will save users time in their daily e-mail tasks if they get past the initial learning curve.
The new Conversation View lets you group threads together so you can view an entire conversation in one place. With plenty of competition in Google's online Gmail search tools, Outlook needed to make attractive new features to continue to be competitive, and this feature makes searching through e-mail much easier.
You also can run Clean Up to strip out redundant messages and threads so you have just the info you need without scanning through several e-mails. Microsoft got mixed reviews during beta testing of this feature, but we think that this might be one of those features like the Ribbon that will become more useful as users become acclimated with a new way of doing things. A new feature called Quicksteps lets you create macros for common daily tasks like regular forwarding of specific e-mails to third parties.
Say you have sales e-mails from several parties that are sent to you on a regular basis, but need to go to another person within your company. With Quicksteps you could custom create a macro that would automatically send that e-mail on with the click of a button.
Like the Conversation View features, Quicksteps is not immediately intuitive, but after some study, it will save you an enormous amount of time processing e-mails in the future. Even with the tweaks for simplifying your e-mail processing, Outlook still seems more in tune with large business clients than with smaller companies that could probably get by with online alternatives. New coauthoring in Word, PowerPoint, and OneNote, as well as advanced e-mail management and calendaring capabilities in Outlook, make collaboration much easier, reducing the time it takes to finish large projects with several contributors.
Word and PowerPoint now have a syncing mechanism to avoid sudden changes while you're working on a project a major concern in the beta. We wonder how people will react to this specific change, since now the only way to have live coauthoring without the need to sync up changes will be through OneNote.
In any case, offering access to shared documents in key business applications from anywhere is something any international business or business traveler can appreciate. Google Docs, though not as elegant, are extremely easy to share with other users, so offering OneNote as the only option may not be enough.
Live edits in OneNote are only one of the new features for Microsoft's notebook-like application, however. Sketching out ideas, collaborating in real time, and adding images, video, audio, and text are all available in OneNote as it sits to the side of what you're working on. This enables you to drop sections of text, images, and other tidbits into OneNote's interface to keep all your ideas in one place.
An upgraded Navigation Bar makes it easy to jump between notebooks to copy or merge information. When you're collaborating on a project, OneNote now features automatic highlighting so you can quickly find changes to your notebook since your last save.
Features like these, along with new visual styles and a Web version with live changes, make OneNote the key collaborative tool of the suite. Our only question is whether people will accept OneNote as their mainstay for live collaboration since it has less name recognition than bigger apps in the suite.
In addition to upgraded collaboration tools, you'll now be able to work on your documents anywhere with slimmed down Web-based versions of Word, PowerPoint, Excel, and OneNote.
The Web based components will make sharing information easier whether it's from your home computer, your phone, or when you're traveling for business. The Web apps preserve the look and feel of a document regardless of the device you're working on--even if it's your smartphone.
These apps seem to work as advertised mostly, but we wonder how well the Web-based versions will work when server loads reach into the several millions of users.
What sets these apps apart from Google Docs and other services is that your documents and spreadsheets retain their formatting, giving Office 's Web apps a leg up against its online counterparts.
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