The company ended up fielding the one and only public beta of Office 15 in July 2012 and RTM'd the client and servers in October 2012. Another hint: The Microsoft Exchange team announced on February 19 that the company is seeking particpants for its private.
That said, it's worth noting that Lync may not arrive at the same time as the Office server family, as Lync sits with Skype, not the rest of Office, in the Microsoft org these days. They also told me that the, which would put it some time between August and October this year. One clue: Microsoft Lync execs told me that Microsoft plans to get the Lync-Skype video federation into the next version of Lync Server. I'm thinking Microsoft is hoping to get Office 16 out toward the beginning of that one-year window. Given that Given that Microsoft, that would mean the follow-on versions should be out some time October 2014 to October 2015. 'We will continue with our e,' Teper said. In an Office Blogs post on February 17, Office Corporate Vice President Jeffrey Teper spelled out Microsoft's planned Office timeframe in broad-brush terms. This week, Microsoft officials did drop a couple of clues that lead me to believe that Office 16, as the next version of Office for Windows clients/servers is codenamed, may arrive before the end of 2014. The following collection of useful tips and hints. Ignore the features you don’t need and use the ones you do. It’s chock-full of fabulous features, some of which you’ll neither need nor use.
Office 2011 for Mac is the latest release of Microsoft’s venerable productivity suite for the Mac.
In the Dock, Control+click or right-click the app icon and choose Options > Keep in Dock. Go to Finder > Applications and open the Office app you want.
The following steps demonstrates how to drag the icons from the Applications folder. Microsoft execs also have been keeping mum on when the company plans to field its next on-premises/local versions of Office client and Office servers for Windows systems, as well as Office for Mac. It's not just the that generates never-ending no comments from Microsoft officials.