Beneath
the hype leading up to the imminent release of Windows 10, other teams at
Microsoft are busy readying the 16th full-version upgrade of
the company’s highly successful office productivity software, Microsoft Office, officially dubbed “Office 2016.”
The
number of Office users has, when including the current 9.2 million Office 365
Personal and Home users
and more than 50 million Office Online users, surged recently to an estimated
total of 1.2 billion users overall.
A Full Version Upgrade?
The fact
this happens to be the 16th full upgrade is coincidental. At one time a full-version upgrade
from, say, version 2 to version 3 was (especially for Microsoft) huge, with
massive feature and performance boosts. Not any longer, it seems. In terms of
new features, this “upgrade” doesn’t have many, though what is new looks useful.
System
admins will find many security and admin updates, and users should enjoy
several new cloud and real-time collaboration features, as well as expanded
touch. Even so, the new features list is a bit sparse for a full-version
upgrade. The truth is, though, that Office doesn’t need a bunch of new word
processing features. It has been around for over 30 years, and behind the ribbon
interface you’ll find commands for nearly every conceivable scenario.
Change isn’t Always Good
Microsoft
knows that while users demand faster, more capable software, they want it
without being inconvenienced—which the company learned the hard way with its Office 2003 upgrade, where Microsoft introduced the
once-reviled-but-now-reveled Ribbon Bar.
Prior to
the icon-laden Ribbon Bar, all of Offices commands were
accessed through a series of menus (with names like, File, Edit, View, and
several others), that spanned the top of the application window. In the 2003
upgrade of Office, Microsoft replaced those menus with the ribbon bars you’re familiar
with today.
Long-time
Office users, for many of whom the software had become almost second nature, no
longer knew how to use their word processing and spreadsheet programs.
What took a few seconds or minutes before the new version entailed searching
through unfamiliar button bars to find nearly every function. Help moving from
the old system to the new was inadequate or unavailable, and Microsoft provided
no way to return to the menu system.
Working
in Office went from second nature to total frustration overnight. Had there
been a viable alternative at the time, Microsoft Office probably would have
lost thousands, perhaps hundreds of thousands, of users in a very short time.
Here
again, with this upcoming release of Office, the number of new features takes a
backseat to modernization of the interface, making it more mobile- and
cloud-friendly.
Even so,
the transition will require a gradual, evolutionary-like process, rather than
all at once.
Suite-Wide
Enhancements
Without
question, any enhancement to help users adapt the software across platforms is
good news. Since many Office programs have several UI elements in common, many
of the enhancements will be suite-wide. One of the most significant upgrades is
the release of Office 2016 for Mac—after
nearly five years, since 2011, with virtually no updates at all; Mac users
finally get a new Microsoft Office—complete with full OneDrive and OneDrive for Business integration. Finally, Office for Mac
will be part of the same suite instead of a compatible spin-off.
Here
are a few new cross-platform features:
·
Tell Me: Had Microsoft included this feature
with Office 2003, it would have saved everybody a lot of grief. Tell Me
consists of a text field on the ribbon bar in Word, PowerPoint, & Excel
where you type help queries. As you type, the program tries to match it,
displaying links to pertinent data.
·
Higher resolution screen support: Many desktops, as well as several
recent hybrids, laptops, and convertibles, support screens with resolution well
beyond 1080p. Office should look better on higher resolution displays with
improved font and icon scaling and high-resolution assets.
·
Small screen profiles: These are essentially layouts you can
save according to the screen size and resolution of your devices. When combined
with other features, such as Outlook’s lean storage footprint on small devices
and enhanced cloud attachments (discussed a little later), small screen
profiles help devices adapt content.
·
Backstage user interface: There are several enhancements to the
“backstage” area and menu, especially when working with OneDrive or OneDrive
for Business. There are several enhancements for working with files, such as
grouping by properties, like creation date or some other criteria. That should
make files easier to find from within Office applications.
·
Outlook Data Loss Protection (DLP) extended to Word, PowerPoint,
and Excel: The synchronization of DLP policies
has been expanded to Excel, Word, and PowerPoint, providing organizations with
unified policies across content stored in Exchange, SharePoint and OneDrive for
Business.
Outlook
Office’s personal information manager has a
few new mobile-friendly features designed to make managing your messages
easier, including:
·
Recently edited files display as potential attachments: Rather than making you wade through a
huge list of file names, now when you start the process to attach a file to an
email message, Outlook displays recently created or edited files—the most likely
attachments.
·
The application window fits small screens better: Instead of shrinking down all panes,
you can change the number of panes to display, thereby making the screen more
legible on smaller screens.
Excel
Aside
from the universal changes listed earlier, most of the enhancements made to
Excel this time around pertain to data manipulation, and are not really
appropriate to this discussion of mobile and cloud-based feature enhancements.
Microsoft says that upcoming Snap and Smart Scrolling features will make
tapping and other selection and data manipulation options easier.
Word

Word’s
updates have been minimal so far. Touch menu and text manipulation with your
fingers is improved, with touchable controls for easy text selection and
copying and pasting. Tapping on spelling mistakes will bring up a touchable
menu with alternative spellings, and a new Bing feature dubbed “Insights” looks
up related Web sites,
news stories, and background information related to selected words.
PowerPoint, Access, OneNote
While
there are some additions to the other Office suite apps, aside from what we’ve
mentioned so far, there is not a lot enhancements. Access and OneNote, for
instance, don’t have Tell Me buttons on their ribbon bars or any other notable
changes, yet.
Conclusion
If
you’ve been following along with the Office 2016 news, you know real-time
collaboration, a feature that Google Docs has supported for some time now, is
one of the much touted new enhancements. However, it and many of these features
were unavailable as of this writing, making them difficult to evaluate.
Keep in mind that so far we are looking at an early beta, which may or may not
look a lot like the current preview. Most, if not all of the recently announced
features should make the cut, though, which is great as long as the interface
stays reasonably intact and those of us that make our living with Office suite
products don’t have to learn them all over again. Office 2016 isn’t a great leap forward, but it also doesn’t make any
mistakes.
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