Versions of microsoft word 2010

Microsoft Office 2010

Microsoft Office 2010.svg
Office 2010 family.png

Microsoft Office 2010 in Windows Vista—clockwise from top left: Word, Excel, OneNote, and PowerPoint; these programs constitute the Home and Student edition.

Developer(s) Microsoft
Initial release June 15, 2010; 12 years ago[1]
Final release

Service Pack 2 (14.0.7261.5000)
/ October 13, 2020; 2 years ago[2]

Operating system

32-bit only:

  • Windows XP SP3
  • Windows Server 2003 SP2

32/64-bit:

  • Windows Vista SP1 or later
  • Windows Server 2008
  • Windows 7
  • Windows Server 2008 R2
  • Windows 8
  • Windows Server 2012
  • Windows 8.1
  • Windows Server 2012 R2
  • Windows 10
  • Windows Server 2016

[3][4]

Platform IA-32 and x64
Predecessor Microsoft Office 2007 (2007)
Successor Microsoft Office 2013 (2013)
Available in 40 languages[5]

List of languages

English, Arabic, Bulgarian, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Estonian, Filipino, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hindi, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Kazakh, Korean, Latvian, Lithuanian, Norwegian (Bokmål), Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish, Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian

Type Office suite
License Trialware
Website products.office.com/office-2010

Microsoft Office 2010 (codenamed Office 14[6]) is a version of Microsoft Office for Microsoft Windows unveiled by Microsoft on May 15, 2009, and released to manufacturing on April 15, 2010,[1] with general availability on June 15, 2010,[7] as the successor to Office 2007 and the predecessor to Office 2013. The macOS equivalent, Microsoft Office 2011 for Mac was released on October 26, 2010.

Office 2010 introduces user interface enhancements including a Backstage view that consolidates document management tasks into a single location. The ribbon introduced in Office 2007 for Access, Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, and Word is the primary user interface for all applications in Office 2010 and is now customizable.[8][9][10] Collaborative editing features that enable multiple users to share and edit documents; extended file format support;[6] integration with OneDrive and SharePoint;[11] and security improvements such as Protected View, a sandbox to protect users from malicious content[12] are among its other new features. It debuted Office Online, free Web-based versions of Excel, OneNote, PowerPoint, and Word.[13][14][15] A new Office Starter 2010 edition replaces Microsoft Works.[16][17][18] Office Mobile 2010, an update to Microsoft’s mobile productivity suite was released on May 12, 2010 as a free upgrade from the Windows Phone Store for Windows Mobile 6.5 devices with a previous version of Office Mobile installed.[19][20][21]

Office 2010 is the first version of Office to ship in a 64-bit version.[22][23] It is also the first version to require volume license product activation.[24][25] Office 2010 is compatible with Windows XP SP3 32-bit, Windows Server 2003 SP2 32-bit through Windows 10 and Windows Server 2016.[26][27] It is the last version of Microsoft Office to support Windows XP SP3 32-bit, Windows Server 2003 SP2 32-bit, Windows Vista SP1 or later, and Windows Server 2008 as the following version, Microsoft Office 2013 only supports Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2 or later.[28][29][30][31]

Reviews of Office 2010 were generally very positive, with praise to the new Backstage view, new customization options for the ribbon, and the incorporation of the ribbon into all programs.[32][33] Sales, however, initially were lower than those of its predecessor.[34] Despite this, Office 2010 was a success for Microsoft, surpassing the company’s previous records for adoption,[35] deployment,[35] and revenue for Office.[36] As of December 31, 2011, approximately 200 million licenses of Office 2010 were sold,[37] before its discontinuation on January 31, 2013.[38]

Mainstream support for Office 2010 ended on October 13, 2015, and extended support ended on October 13, 2020, the same dates that mainstream and extended support ended for Windows Embedded Standard 7.[39] Office 2010 is the last version of Office that can be activated without enrolling in a Microsoft account; enrollment for activation is required starting with Office 2013.[40] On June 9, 2018, Microsoft announced that its forums would no longer include Office 2010 or other products in extended support among its products for discussions involving support.[41] On August 27, 2021, Microsoft announced that Outlook 2010 and Outlook 2007 would be cut off from connecting to Microsoft 365 Exchange servers on November 1, 2021.[42]

History and development[edit]

Development started in 2007 while Microsoft was finishing work on Office 12, released as Microsoft Office 2007. The version number 13 was skipped because of the fear of the number 13.[43] It was previously thought that Office 2010 (then called Office 14) would ship in the first half of 2009.[44]

On April 15, 2009, Microsoft confirmed that Office 2010 would be released in the first half of 2010. They announced on May 12, 2009, at a Tech Ed event, a trial version of the 64-bit edition.[45][46] The Technical Preview 1 (Version: 14.0.4006.1010) was leaked on May 15, 2009.[47]

An internal post-beta build was leaked on July 12, 2009. This was newer than the official preview build and included a «Limestone» internal test application (note: the EULA indicates Beta 2).[48] On July 13, 2009, Microsoft announced Office 2010 at its Worldwide Partner Conference 2009.

On July 14, 2009, Microsoft started to send out invitations on Microsoft Connect to test an official preview build of Office 2010.[49] On August 30, 2009, the beta build 4417 was leaked on the internet via torrents.[50]

The public beta was available to subscribers of TechNet, MSDN and Microsoft Connect users on November 16, 2009.[51] On November 18, 2009, the beta was officially released to the general public at the Microsoft Office Beta website, which was originally launched by Microsoft on November 11, 2009 to provide screenshots of the new office suite.[52] Office 2010 Beta was a free, fully functional version and expired on October 31, 2010.[53]

In an effort to help customers and partners with deployment of Office 2010, Microsoft launched an Office 2010 application compatibility program with tools and guidance available for download.[54] On February 5, 2010, the official release candidate build 4734.1000 was available to Connect and MSDN testers. It was leaked to torrent sites.[55] A few days after, the RTM Escrow build was leaked.

Microsoft announced the RTM on April 15, 2010, and that the final version was to have speech technologies for use with text to speech in Microsoft OneNote, Microsoft PowerPoint, Microsoft Outlook, and Microsoft Word. Office 2010 was to be originally released to business customers on May 12, 2010,[56] however it was made available to Business customers with Software Assurance on April 27, 2010, and to other Volume Licensing Customers on May 1.[57] MSDN and TechNet subscribers have been able to download the RTM version since April 22, 2010. The RTM version number is 14.0.4763.1000.[58][59] Office 2010 was launched for general customer availability on June 15, 2010.[7][60]

Service packs[edit]

Service pack Version number Release date
Service Pack 1 (SP1) 14.0.6029.1000[61] November 17, 2010[62]
Service Pack 2 (SP2) 14.0.7015.1000[61] April 8, 2013[63]

Microsoft released two service packs for Office 2010 that were primarily intended to address software bugs. Service Pack 1 (SP1) and Service Pack 2 (SP2) were released concurrently with updates for additional products including Office Online, SharePoint, and SharePoint Designer.[62][63]

On November 17, 2010, Microsoft invited a select number of testers at the Microsoft Connect Web portal to test SP1 Beta 1.[64][65] SP1 was released by Microsoft on June 27, 2011, and included compatibility, performance, security, and stability improvements. SP1 is a cumulative update that includes all previous updates, as well as fixes exclusive to its release;[62][66] a list of exclusive fixes was released by Microsoft.[67] SP1 also introduced additional features for Access, Excel, OneNote, Outlook, PowerPoint, and Word. As examples, OneNote 2010 SP1 introduced the ability to open notebooks stored in OneDrive directly from within the app itself, while Outlook 2010 SP1 introduced Microsoft 365 support.[66] With the release of SP1, the use of Office Online in Google Chrome and Internet Explorer 9 was officially supported by Microsoft for the first time.[68]

On April 8, 2013, a beta build of Office 2010 SP2 was released.[69] SP2 was a cumulative update officially released on July 16, 2013, and included all of the previously released compatibility, performance, stability, and security fixes, as well as numerous exclusive fixes;[63] a list of fixes exclusive to SP2 was released by Microsoft.[70] Microsoft claimed that with the release of SP2, Office 2010 would feature improved compatibility with Internet Explorer 10, Office 2013, SharePoint 2013, and Windows 8.[63][71] Because SP2 is cumulative, SP1 is not a prerequisite for its installation.[72]

New features[edit]

User interface[edit]

In both its client programs and in its Internet implementation, the design of Office 2010 incorporates features from SharePoint and borrows from Web 2.0 ideas.[73][74][75] Office 2010 is more «role-based» than previous versions of Microsoft Office, with specific features tailored to employees in «roles such as research and development professionals, sales people, and human resources.»[75]

Backstage view[edit]

The Info tab in the navigation pane of Backstage displaying a document overview alongside management tasks in Word 2010.

A new Backstage view interface replaces the Office menu introduced in Office 2007 and is designed to facilitate access to document management and sharing tasks by consolidating them within a single location.[76] In theatre, backstage refers to the area behind the stage where behind the scenes activities and preparations commence; the Backstage view is accordingly an interface dedicated to activities and preparations before saving or sharing a document.[77] Backstage consists of both a left-hand navigation pane and an adjacent main pane; the navigation pane includes a series of vertically arranged common commands to open or save files, and tabs that, when opened, expose document management tasks and contextual information within the main pane.[76][78] A customizable number of recently opened documents can also be displayed within the navigation pane.[79]

Tasks that are accessed via tabs in the main Backstage pane are categorized into separate groups that display contextual information related to app configurations, files, and tasks; each tab displays information relevant to that specific tab. On the Info tab in Word, for example, document metadata details are displayed within the Prepare for Sharing group to inform users of potentially personal information before the file is shared with other users,[80] whereas the Help tab displays Office 2010 version information and product licensing status.[81] In Office 2007, this information was included within separate locations.[80][81] From the Info tab, users can access revisions of currently open Excel, PowerPoint, and Word documents, as well as the latest unsaved version of a document that was previously closed.[82] Within the Print tab, Backstage also combines the previously separate print and print preview features by displaying printer tasks, settings, and a zooming user interface to preview the currently open document without the user having to open a dialog box.[83]

Backstage is extensible; developers can add their own commands, tabs, tasks, or related information.[84][85][86]

File tab[edit]

The File tab replaces the Office button introduced in Office 2007 and offers similar functionality. The previous Office button—a round button adorned with the Microsoft Office 2007 logo—had a different appearance from the ribbon tabs in the Office 2007 interface and was positioned away from them, with a target that extended toward the upper left corner of the screen in accordance with Fitts’s law.[79][87] Microsoft stated this button enhanced the usability of Office, but many users saw it as «branding decoration, rather than a functional button.» As a result, in Office 2010 it was replaced with a File tab that appears next to the other tabs in the ribbon instead of the upper left-hand corner of the screen.[79] The File tab is colored on a per-app basis (e.g., it is colored orange in Outlook). Opening the File tab displays the new Backstage view.[88]

Pasting options gallery[edit]

Office 2010 introduces a pasting options gallery on the ribbon, in the context menu, and in the object-oriented user interface that replaces the Paste Special dialog box and Paste Recovery feature seen in previous versions of Office. The gallery introduces Live Preview effects to the paste process when users position the mouse cursor over an option in the gallery so that the result of the process can be previewed before it is applied to the document; a tooltip with an associated description and keyboard shortcut for that option will also appear. If users position the mouse cursor over a gallery option in the context menu, the rest of the context menu becomes transparent so that it does not obstruct preview results within the document. To facilitate keyboard-based paste operations, users can navigate the gallery by using the arrow keys on a keyboard or press Ctrl after pressing Ctrl+V to display gallery options. Gallery options change based on the content in the clipboard and the app into which the content is pasted.[89]

Ribbon improvements[edit]

The ribbon introduced in Office 2007 is fully customizable and included in all programs in Office 2010.[8][9] Users can add or rename custom ribbon tabs or groups, add additional commands to the default tabs, and hide tabs that are not used. Users can also export or import any customization changes made to the ribbon to facilitate backups, deployment, or sharing, or reset all ribbon customizations.[90] The ribbon was also updated with a visible interface option to minimize it, which leaves only the tabs exposed.[91]

After the launch of Office 2010, Microsoft provided free downloads for a new Favorites tab that consolidated commands based on customer feedback regarding the most frequently used commands in all Office programs.[92]

Other UI changes[edit]

  • The default color scheme in Office 2010 is silver instead of blue as in Office 2007 and now features a 5:1 contrast ratio to improve accessibility and readability.[88]
  • All app icons have been redesigned in Office 2010. The new icons are based on colors that correspond to their respective programs, as per previous releases, with an increased emphasis on app letters.[88]
  • The Office 2010 splash screen has been redesigned from the one seen in Office 2007 and animates when an app is launched.[88]
  • OneNote and PowerPoint support mathematical equations through an Equation Tools contextual tab on the ribbon.[93][94]
  • PowerPoint and Publisher include alignment guides so users can align objects to a grid.[94][95]
  • Smart tags introduced in Office XP have been renamed as Actions and are now accessible from the context menu.[96]

File formats[edit]

Office 2010 includes updated support for ISO/IEC 29500:2008, the International Standard version of Office Open XML (OOXML) file format.[6] Office 2010 provides read support for ECMA-376, read/write support for ISO/IEC 29500 Transitional, and read support for ISO/IEC 29500 Strict.[97] In its pre-release form, however, Office 2010 only supported the Transitional variant, and not the Strict.[98]

Office 2010 also continued support for OpenDocument Format (ODF) 1.1, which is a joint OASIS/ISO/IEC standard (ISO/IEC 26300:2006/Amd 1:2012 — Open Document Format for Office Applications (OpenDocument) v1.1).[6]

Document co-authoring[edit]

Office 2010 introduces co-authoring functionality in the Excel Web App, the OneNote Web App, and in the client versions of OneNote, PowerPoint, and Word for documents stored on SharePoint 2010 sites and for shared documents in OneDrive[11] and Microsoft 365.[99] A co-authoring session is automatically initiated when two or more users open the same document. From Backstage within Excel, OneNote, PowerPoint, and Word, users can also save documents directly to remote locations to facilitate remote access and co-authoring sessions. In the Excel Web App, the OneNote, and the OneNote Web App edits to a shared document in a co-authoring session occur on a sequential basis, in near real-time, as shared documents save automatically with each edit. In PowerPoint and Word, however, users must upload changes to the server by manually saving the shared document.[11]

During a co-authoring session the Excel Web App, PowerPoint, and Word denote how many co-authors are editing a document through a status bar icon that, when clicked in PowerPoint and Word, displays contact information including the presence of co-authors; the Info tab of Backstage also displays these details. When users open the name of a co-author, they can send email with an email client or start instant messaging conversations with each other if a supported app such as Skype for Business is installed on each machine. If a conflict between multiple changes occurs in PowerPoint or Word, sharers can approve or reject changes before uploading them to the server.[11]

In both OneNote and the OneNote Web App, users can view the names of co-authors alongside their respective edits to the content in a shared notebook, or create separate versions of pages for individual use. Edits made since a notebook was last opened are automatically highlighted, with initials of the co-author who made the edit displayed. In OneNote, co-authors can also search for all edits made by a specific co-author. OneNote 2010 notebooks can be shared with Office Mobile 2010 users on Windows Phone 7.[11] OneNote 2007 users can also participate in a co-authoring session with OneNote 2010 users if shared notebooks use the older OneNote 2007 file format; however, co-author search, and page versioning, and compatibility with the OneNote Web App will not be available.[100]

Installation and deployment[edit]

Office 2010 introduces a new Click-to-Run installation process based on Microsoft App-V Version 4 streaming and virtualization technology as an alternative to the traditional Windows Installer-based installation process for the Home and Student and Home and Business editions, and as a mandatory installation process for the Starter edition. Click-to-Run products install in a virtualized environment (a Q: partition) that downloads product features in the background after the programs have been installed so that users can immediately begin using the programs. The download process is optimized for broadband connections.[101]

During the Office 2010 retail lifecycle Microsoft, in collaboration with original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) and retail partners, introduced a Product Key Card licensing program that allowed users to purchase a single license to activate Home and Student, Home and Business, and Professional editions preinstalled on personal computers at a reduced cost when compared with traditional retail media.[102] Product Key Card versions are restricted to a single machine.[103]

Volume license versions of Office 2010 require product activation. Office 2007’s product activation was only required for OEM or retail versions of the product.[24]

Security[edit]

Office File Validation[edit]

Office File Validation, previously included only in Publisher 2007 for PUB files has been incorporated into Excel, PowerPoint, and Word in Office 2010 to validate the integrity of proprietary binary file formats (e.g., DOC, PPT, and XLS) introduced in previous versions of Microsoft Office. When users open a document, the structure of its file format is scanned to ensure that it conforms with specifications defined by XML schema; if a file fails the validation process it will, by default, be opened in Protected View, a new read-only, isolated sandbox environment to protect users from potentially malicious content.[104] this design allows users to visually assess potentially unsafe documents that fail validation.[105] Microsoft stated that it is possible for documents to fail validation as a false positive. To improve Office File Validation, Office 2010 collects various information about files that have failed validation and also creates copies of these files for optional submission to Microsoft through Windows Error Reporting.[104] Users are prompted approximately every two weeks from the date of a failed validation attempt to submit copies of files or of other information for analysis; prompts include a list of files that will be submitted to Microsoft and require explicit user consent prior to submission. Administrators can disable data submission.[106]

On December 14, 2010, Microsoft announced it would backport Office File Validation to Office 2003 and Office 2007.[107][108] On April 12, 2011, it was backported as an add-in for Office 2003 SP3 and Office 2007 SP2, and on June 28, 2011, was made available through Microsoft Update.[109] Office File Validation in Office 2003 and Office 2007 differs from the version in Office 2010 as these two releases do not include the Protected View feature. When users attempt to open a document that fails validation, they must first agree to a warning prompt before it can be opened.[109] Additionally, the configuration options in these two releases are only made available through the Windows Registry,[110] whereas Office 2010 also provides Group Policy options.[104]

Protected View[edit]

Protected View, an isolated sandbox environment for Excel, PowerPoint, and Word, replaces the Isolated Conversion Environment update available for previous versions of Microsoft Office. When a document is opened from a potentially unsafe location such as the Internet or as an e-mail attachment, or if a document does not comply with File Block policy or if it fails Office File Validation, it is opened in Protected View, which prohibits potentially unsafe documents from modifying components, files, and other resources on a system; users can also manually open documents in Protected View.[111] When a document is opened in Protected View, users are allowed to view, copy, and paste the contents of the document, but there are no options to edit, save, or print contents, and all active document content including ActiveX controls, database connections, hyperlinks, and macros is disabled.[112] Users can open documents outside of Protected View by clicking on the «Enable Editing» button that appears on a message bar within the Office user interface. As a precautionary measure, active content within a potentially unsafe document remains disabled when a user reopens it after exiting Protected View until a user clicks the «Enable Content» button on the message bar, which designates the document as a trusted document so that users are not prompted when it is opened in the future.[113]

Protected View is implemented as a separate child process instance of Excel, PowerPoint, and Word. The main process of each app is assigned the current user’s access token and hosts the Office user interface elements such as the ribbon, whereas the Protected View process consists of the document viewing area, parses and renders the document content, and operates with reduced privileges; the main process serves as a mediator for requests initiated by the separate process. In Windows Vista and later versions of Windows, Mandatory Integrity Control and User Interface Privilege Isolation further restrict the separate process.[111] Protected View is also available when Office 2010 is installed on Windows XP, but it is not as robust due to the absence of these security features.[114]

Trusted documents[edit]

Office 2010 allows users to designate individual documents as trusted, which allows all active content to operate each time a specific document is opened; trusted documents do not open in Protected View. Documents residing in either local or remote directories can be trusted, but users are warned if an attempt is made to trust a document from a remote resource. To increase security, documents in Temporary Internet Files and the TEMP directory cannot be trusted. Trusted document preferences, referred to as trust records, are stored within the Windows Registry on a per-user basis; trust records contain the full path to trusted documents and other specific file information to protect users from social engineering attacks.[113]

Other security features[edit]

  • Office 2010 is the first version of Office to natively support Data Execution Prevention (DEP).[12] It complies with DEP policies and provides options to disable DEP in the interface or through Group Policy.[115]
  • An Office ActiveX kill bit provides options to configure ActiveX controls within Office 2010 without affecting the operation of these controls within Internet Explorer.[12]
  • Additional Group Policy settings for File Block functionality in Excel, PowerPoint, and Word.[12]
  • Cryptography improvements including support for Cryptography API: Next Generation in Access, Excel, InfoPath, OneNote, PowerPoint, and Word; Suite B support; and integrity validation of encrypted files.[12]
  • Document time stamping of digital signatures.[12]
  • Domain-based password complexity and enforcement policies.[12]

Graphics[edit]

Artistic effects[edit]

Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, and Word include a variety of artistic effects such as glass, paint stroke, pastel, and pencil sketch effects that users can apply to inserted images.[116]

Background removal[edit]

A new background removal feature based on Microsoft Research technology is included in Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, and Word to remove the backgrounds of images inserted into documents. It is exposed as a Remove Background command that appears on the Picture Tools contextual tab on the ribbon when an image is selected, which displays a separate Background Removal contextual tab and places a selection rectangle and magenta color over portions of the selected image; the selection rectangle algorithmically determines which area of the selected image will be retained once the background removal process is complete, whereas the magenta color indicates the areas that will be removed. Users can manually adjust the position and size of the selection rectangle and also mark specific areas of an image to keep or remove;[117] it is also possible to delete a mark after an inadvertent selection or if it produces an undesired result. After the background has been removed, users can apply various visual effects to the result image or wrap text in a document around it; users can also crop the image since removing the background does not reduce its original size.[118]

Cropping improvements[edit]

Office 2010 introduces photo crop process improvements in Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, Publisher, and Word. The crop selection rectangle now grays out the portion of a photo to be removed when cropping and displays the result area in color—instead of omitting the removed portion from view, as previous versions of Office did. Photos can now be repositioned underneath the selection rectangle. A new Aspect Ratio option under the Crop command of the ribbon presents a drop-drop down menu with options for both landscape and portrait page orientations to customize the aspect ratio of the selection rectangle before cropping, which automatically resizes the selection rectangle when users start the crop process; users can manually resize the selection rectangle and simultaneously preserve its aspect ratio by resizing it from its corners while pressing the ⇧ Shift key.[119][120]

The Picture Shape command in previous versions of Office has been replaced with a new Crop to Shape command that allows users to resize and move the selected shape itself when cropping. Office 2010, like previous versions, automatically resizes photos that are inserted into shapes by default, which can negatively affect their aspect ratio. To address this, photos in shapes can now be cropped or resized after being inserted, and individual Fit and Fill options have been incorporated. The former option resizes the selected photo so that the entire area of the crop selection rectangle or shape is filled, whereas the latter option resizes the photo so that it is displayed within the selection rectangle or within a shape in its entirety; both options maintain the original aspect ratio of the selected photo. Photos inserted into SmartArt diagrams can also be cropped, resized, or repositioned.[119]

Font effects and enhancements[edit]

Excel, PowerPoint, and Word support text effects such as bevels, gradient fills, glows, reflections, and shadows. Publisher and Word support OpenType features such as kerning, ligatures, stylistic sets, and text figures with fonts such as Calibri, Cambria, Corbel, and Gabriola.[116]

Hardware acceleration[edit]

Excel, PowerPoint, and Word support hardware accelerated graphics when installed on a machine with a DirectX 9.0c-compliant GPU that has at least 64 MB of video memory. Excel supports hardware accelerated chart drawing, and PowerPoint supports hardware accelerated animations, transitions, and video playback and effects; slideshow elements are now rendered as sprites, which are then composited with additional effects such as fades and wipes implemented using Pixel Shader 2.0. All Office 2010 programs support Direct3D hardware accelerated SmartArt and WordArt object and text rendering.[121] Additionally, the background removal feature and image adjustments such as brightness and contrast are all accelerated when used on capable hardware.[122]

Screenshot capture[edit]

Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, and Word allow users to immediately insert a screenshot of open app windows or a selection of content on the screen into documents without saving the image as a file. The functionality is exposed through a new Screenshot command on the Insert tab of the ribbon that, when clicked, presents individual options to capture either app windows or selections of content. The former option presents open windows as thumbnails in a gallery on the ribbon that insert a screenshot of the selected window into the active app, while the latter option minimizes the currently active app, dims the screen, and presents a selection rectangle for users to create a screenshot by holding the main mouse button, dragging the selection rectangle to a desired area of the screen, and then releasing the button to automatically insert the selection as an image into the document. Only windows that have not been minimized to the taskbar can be captured. After a screenshot has been inserted, various adjustments can be made.[123]

SmartArt improvements[edit]

SmartArt, a set of diagrams introduced in Office 2007 for Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, and Word has been updated with new effects, options, and interface improvements. The SmartArt text pane now allows users to insert, modify, and reorder images and their associated text within a diagram, and new Move Up and Move Down commands on the ribbon facilitate the reordering of content. Images are automatically cropped when inserted into shapes within SmartArt diagrams to preserve their aspect ratio; users can also manually reposition images. During the crop process, the layout of shapes in SmartArt diagrams is locked to prevent users from inadvertently modifying its position while making adjustments to an image.[119] Approximately 50 new diagrams have been introduced. Of these, a new Picture category dedicated to the presentation of images includes over 30 diagrams, and the Organization Chart category includes 3 new diagrams.[124]

A new Convert command on the SmartArt contextual tab of the ribbon includes additional features for Excel and PowerPoint. The Convert to Shapes feature, introduced in Office 2007 SP2 as a context menu option that turned SmartArt into a group of customizable shapes is now on the ribbon in both programs. Additionally, in PowerPoint, it is possible to convert SmartArt diagrams into bulleted lists through a new Convert to Text option.[124]

Accessibility[edit]

Accessibility Checker[edit]

Office 2010 introduces Accessibility Checker in Excel, PowerPoint, and Word that examines documents for issues affecting visually impaired readers. It is accessible through the «Check for Issues» button on the Prepare for Sharing group on the Info tab of Backstage, which opens a task pane with a list of accessibility issues discovered in the document and provides suggestions to resolve them. Backstage itself also reports accessibility issues in the Prepare for Sharing group so that they can be resolved before the document is shared with other users.[125] Administrators can configure how prominently this information is displayed within the interface through Group Policy.[126]

Language preferences[edit]

A Language Preferences interface in Access, Excel, OneNote, Outlook, PowerPoint, Project, Publisher, Visio, and Word is accessible in the Backstage view and replaces the language customization interface seen in previous versions of Office.[127] The new interface provides information about currently installed language packs and their related components, hyperlinks to download additional content, and a new ScreenTip Language feature that allows users to customize the language of tooltips.[128]

Text-to-speech improvements[edit]

A Mini Translator allows users to translate selected text in OneNote, Outlook, PowerPoint, and Word. Translations for phrases or words are displayed within a tooltip, from which users can hear an audio pronunciation of the selected text provided by one of the Microsoft text-to-speech voices installed on a machine, copy the translation to the clipboard so that it can be inserted into another document, or view a definition provided by an online service if the selected text is a word.[129] Audio pronunciations are made available through a Speak command, which can be accessed separately from the Mini Translator (e.g., added to the ribbon), but the command can only be used if a text-to-speech engine matching the language of the selected text is installed. Users can download various text-to-speech engines from Microsoft.[130] Speak is not available when Office 2010 is installed on Windows XP.[131]

New app-specific features[edit]

New features in Word 2010
  • A new navigation pane replaces the document map in previous versions of Word and allows users to drag and drop headings within the pane to rearrange pages in a document. The navigation pane also replaces the Find dialog box in previous versions and now highlights search results.[132]
  • Windows Live Writer integration[8]
New features in Excel 2010
  • Excel 2010 includes a redesigned calculation engine to improve performance in response to feedback from users related to previous versions of Excel.[121] As part of the new calculation engine, a new version of the Solver add-in and new versions of statistical functions were introduced.[133]
  • Data points in a data series are limited only by available memory; in Excel 2007, there was a limitation of 32,000 data points.[133]
  • Graphing features including Sparklines, miniature graphics that represent trends among data; and Slicers, which allow users to quickly filter data results[133]
  • Macro recording support for chart elements[133]
  • Rule-based cell formatting[133]
New features in PowerPoint 2010
  • A new Reading View allows users to display and progress through presentations in a window.[94]
  • An Animation Painter allows users to select and copy an animation and apply it to another slide.[94]
  • Audio editing and playback functionality allows users to fade, bookmark, or trim audio.[94]
  • Presentation sections allow users to visually customize the organization of slides in a presentation.[94]
  • Support for custom shapes[94]
  • The ability to remotely broadcast a slide show («Broadcast Slide Show») with the use of a Microsoft account; local broadcasts through SharePoint are supported.[94]
  • Users can simulate a laser pointer in PowerPoint 2010 with a mouse cursor by holding down the Ctrl key and pressing the primary mouse button during a presentation.[94]
  • Video editing and playback functionality; local videos are now embedded within slides by default so that they can be played regardless of whether users have access to their original source. Options include the ability to add various visual effects, to bookmark specific scenes for playback when advancing slides, to fade in or out, and to trim videos. Online videos can also be inserted into presentations, and presentations themselves can be saved as videos.[94]
New features in OneNote 2010
  • A native x64 printer driver for x64 operating systems[134]
  • A new docked mode enables OneNote to be displayed alongside next to another app window while taking notes.[93]
  • A notebook recycle bin, which stores for 60 days any notebooks, pages, sections, and section groups that were previously deleted.[93]
  • A Quick Filing feature allows users to choose which location in a notebook to quickly send information to from within other programs.[134]
  • Future incremental search results are prioritized based on previous search queries.[93]
  • Linked Notes reference specific sections of a source document or Web page so that clicking a note that was taken while the source was open will automatically return users to that content;[134] Internet Explorer 6 and later versions, PowerPoint 2010, and Word 2010 support Linked Notes.[93]
  • Multi-touch pan and pinch gestures when installed on a multi-touch capable operating system such as Windows 7[134]
  • Outlook tasks can be created directly from OneNote.[134]
  • Page versioning, which allows multiple versions of a single page to exist in a notebook[93]
  • Sections can be copied or merged.[93]
  • Style galleries, similar to those in Word, have been included in OneNote to provide basic formatting options.[93]
  • Support for automatic text wrapping.[134]
  • XPS documents protected by information rights management can be inserted as printouts.[134]
  • The ability to sync notebooks with a Microsoft account is available;[134] SP1 introduced the ability to open notebooks from OneDrive.[66]
  • The Format Painter of Word is available in OneNote.[93]
  • Wiki-style bracket syntax can be used to link to pages, sections, and section groups from other locations in a notebook.[93]
New features in Outlook 2010
  • Calendar Groups aggregate calendars of multiple contacts to see the calendar of each content in that group; resources such as conference rooms can be added to see all calendars belonging to the contacts assigned to conference room in a building.[135]
  • Conversation View now groups messages by their corresponding subjects regardless of originating folders and includes new commands:[135]
    • Clean Up deletes all messages in a conversation but the most recent message
    • Ignore deletes all messages in a conversation and sends all future replies to the Deleted Items folder
  • Meeting Suggestions now appear when creating a meeting request; attendee schedules are analyzed to determine the most appropriate suggested time for each attendee.[135]
  • Outlook Social Connector can aggregate content from social network accounts belonging to contacts; it also displays activity feeds, attachments, appointments, and communications for contacts regardless of whether a social network is in use.[135]
  • Quick Steps are collections of commands that perform multiple actions simultaneously; users can create their own Quick Steps and optionally assign keyboard shortcuts or customize tooltips for each of them.[136]
  • Quick View displays the calendar in a message when the user receives a meeting request from a contact so that the user can review adjacent or conflicting appointments[135]
  • Search Tools contextual tab on the Ribbon appears when users perform a search so that it can be filtered based on specific criteria[135]
  • Schedule View arranges meetings in a horizontal view so users can compare contact meeting times[135]
  • Spell check is available in meeting requests, message subjects, and tasks[135]
  • Support for multiple Exchange accounts within a single Outlook profile[135]
  • The default size limit for Unicode .ost and .pst files in Outlook 2010 is 50 GB (instead of 20 GB as it was in Outlook 2007).[137]
  • The To-Do Bar introduced in Outlook 2007 includes additional customization options and visual indicators for conflicts and unanswered meeting requests.[135]
  • Unified Messaging improvements including information rights management for voice mail, and voice mail transcripts[135]
  • Users can now adjust the zoom level of calendars and messages in Outlook[135]
  • Users are now notified before sending a message without a subject[135]
  • Users are now able to change the IMAP Deleted Items folder location[135]
New features in Publisher 2010
  • A new Page Navigation pane presents thumbnails of each page in a document; clicking a thumbnail opens that page, while dragging it rearranges pages.[95]
  • Live Preview effects for formatting, objects, and text[95]
  • Options to share building blocks and templates to the online Publisher user communities.[95]
  • The scratch area can now be hidden.[95]
New features in Access 2010
  • A Navigation Form interface allows database elements to be customized via drag-and-drop.[138]
  • An Image Gallery stores previously used images so that users can quickly reuse them in a database.[138]
  • Application Parts, which are predefined database templates are available.[138]
  • Data bars now offer gradient fill options.[138]
  • Databases can be shared on the Web via Access Services in Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010.[139]
  • Quick Start fields provide predefined groups[138]
  • Web services can be used as external data sources in Access 2010.[139]

Removed features[edit]

Removed from the entire suite
  • Document workspaces[128]
  • InterConnect support[128]
  • Microsoft Office Document Imaging[140]
  • Microsoft Office Document Scanning[140]
  • Office Startup Assistant[128]
  • Office Diagnostics[128]
  • Research and Reference pane for Internet Explorer[132]
  • Special symbol input add-in for East Asia versions[128]
  • Support for MSXML version 5[128]
  • Insert Clip Art task pane and various Clip Organizer features[128]
Features removed from Word
  • AutoSummary feature[132]
  • Support for Word Add-in Libraries (WLL)[132]
Features removed from Excel
  • The Conditional Sum and Lookup wizards have been deprecated; a new Function wizard offers similar functionality[133]
  • The Person Name smart tag has been removed[132]
Features removed from PowerPoint
  • The ability to save a presentation as a web page[141]
  • The option to change the maximum size of sounds inserted in presentations has been replaced by the ability to embed files of any size, which provides similar options[141]
Features removed from OneNote
  • List and Document task panes are no longer available[134]
  • Live Session functionality, including the ability to start and join a live session; Microsoft touts the new Shared Notebook functionality as a replacement[134]
  • Options to create Outlook appointments or contacts[134]
  • Outlining toolbar[134]
  • SimpleImporter API[134]
Features removed from Outlook
  • ANSI offline Outlook data files (.ost) for Exchange synchronization[142]
  • Business Contact Manager;
    • Microsoft subsequently released Business Contact Manager as a free download for Office 2010 Professional or Outlook 2010 consumers with Small Business or Professional editions of Office 2003 or Office 2007, the Ultimate edition of Office 2007, or Outlook 2003 or Outlook 2007.[143]
  • Calendar rebasing tool[142]
  • DAV connectivity for HTTP account types
  • Exchange 2000 connectivity[142]
  • Exchange Message Security feature support[142]
  • Postmarks[142]
  • Photo resize options for 640×480 (VGA) and 800×600 (SVGA) display resolutions[142]
  • Search toolbar add-in[142]
Features removed from Publisher
  • The ability to create new web publications or websites; users can still edit publications or websites created in earlier versions of Publisher[144]
  • Various outdated publication settings[144]
Features removed from Access
  • Calendar control[139]
  • Data access pages[139]
  • ISAM for Lotus 1-2-3. Paradox versions 3–7, Access 1.0, and Access 2.0 (Red 2 or Jet 2.0)[139]
  • Replication Conflict Viewer[139]
  • Reports can no longer be exported as individual SNP files; Microsoft recommends that users export to PDF or XPS files[139]
Features removed from Project
  • Custom forms support[145]
  • Office Web Components resource availability graphs[145]
  • Save as Excel Pivot Table has been deprecated; the ability to save directly into a Pivot Table is no longer available[145]
  • Various add-ins have been removed[145]
Features removed from Visio
  • ShapeStudio, available in previous versions of the Visio software development kit (SDK), has been removed from the Visio 2010 SDK[146]
  • The Find Shape feature; users can instead search for new content online[146]
  • Users can no longer dock items to the top or to the bottom of the interface[146]
  • Various status bar items[146]

Editions[edit]

Comparison[edit]

Comparison of Microsoft Office 2010 editions[147][148][149][150]

Suites[151][152] As an individual product Starter Office Online Personal[a] Home and Student[b] Home and Business[c] Standard Professional3
Professional Academic[d]
University
Professional Plus[e]
Licensing scheme Varies OEM Free Retail and OEM Retail Retail Retail and Volume Academic and Retail Retail and Volume
Word 2010 Yes Starter edition Web-based Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Excel 2010 Yes Starter edition Web-based Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
PowerPoint 2010 Yes Viewer (Separate) Web-based Viewer (Separate) Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
OneNote 2010 Yes No Web-based No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Outlook 2010 Yes No No Yes No Yes Yes Yes Yes
Publisher 2010 Yes No No No No No Yes Yes Yes
Access 2010 Yes No No No No No No Yes Yes
InfoPath 2010 Yes No No No No No No No Yes
SharePoint Workspace 2010 Yes No No No No No No No Yes
SharePoint Designer 2010 Yes No No No No No No No No
Project 2010 Yes No No No No No No No No
Visio 2010 Yes Viewer (Separate) No Viewer Viewer Viewer Viewer (Separate) Viewer Viewer
Lync 2010 Yes No No No No No No No Volume channel only
Picture Manager 2010 No No No No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Office Customization Tool (OCT) 2010[f] No No No No No No Volume channel only No Volume channel only
Remarks
  1. ^ Office 2010 Personal was available only in Japan.[152]
  2. ^ Office 2010 Home and Student can be installed on up to three machines in a single household for non-commercial use; the Product Key Card version permits one installation on a single machine.[103]
  3. ^ Office 2010 Home and Business and Office 2010 Professional can be installed on two devices for use by a single user; the Product Key Card version permits one installation on a single machine.[103]
  4. ^ On February 1, 2012, Office 2010 University replaced Office 2010 Professional Academic in an effort to curtail fraudulent product use.[153]
  5. ^ Office 2010 Professional Plus is available to Volume License customers.[154] It is also offered through MSDN or TechNet.[155]
  6. ^ The Office Customization Tool is used to customize the installation of Office by creating a Windows Installer Patch (.MSP) file, and replaces the Custom Installation Wizard and Custom Deployment Wizard included in Office 2003 and earlier versions of the Office Resource Kit. It is available in Volume License editions.[156]

Starter edition[edit]

Office Starter 2010 is an ad-supported, reduced-functionality edition consisting of Excel and Word, discontinued in June 2012 before the release of Office 2013 and Windows 8.[157] Office Starter 2010 was available to original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) to preload on Windows PCs as a replacement for Microsoft Works;[16][17][18] it is only compatible with Windows Vista and Windows 7.[158] Word Starter 2010 cannot insert captions, citations, footnotes, endnotes, equations, indexes, or SmartArt graphics or text, and it does not support change trackage, customization, digital rights management, full screen view, or macro functionality.[159] Excel Starter 2010 does not support calculation steps, circular references, custom views, error analyses, external data connections, PivotTables, or PivotCharts.[160] Office Starter 2010 is the only edition to offer a To-Go Device Manager feature, which allows users to install the productivity suite to a USB flash drive and run it temporarily on any computer with Windows Vista SP1 or Windows 7 installed to which the USB drive is connected.[161]

Office Online[edit]

Office Online is a collection of free Web-based versions of Excel, OneNote, PowerPoint, and Word that offers fewer features than its client counterparts.[14] It was released to OneDrive users before the general availability of Office 2010.[15]

Office Mobile 2010[edit]

Office Mobile 2010 was released before general availability of Office 2010 as a free upgrade for users of Windows Mobile 6.5 devices with a previous version of Office Mobile installed.[19] New features in Office Mobile 2010 include:[162]

  • Conversation View: When used with Exchange Server 2007 or later, Outlook Mobile 2010 combines related emails into a group for easier reading and management—as the Outlook 2010 desktop client does.
  • PowerPoint Streaming: When used in Windows Phone 7, Office Mobile 2010 can stream high-fidelity presentations from a PC to a phone.
  • Presentation Companion: PowerPoint Mobile 2010 allows users to use Bluetooth to control a computer presentation from Windows Mobile and view speaker notes on the mobile screen.
  • SharePoint Workspace Mobile 2010: Users can email or sync documents from SharePoint Server 2010 directly to their Windows Mobile devices for offline viewing and editing and sync them when reconnected.
  • SmartArt Graphics: Office Mobile 2010 can display SmartArt charts and graphics. PowerPoint Mobile 2010 in particular has enhanced support for displaying SmartArt graphics.
  • Text Reflow: Preserves charts, rich formatting options, SmartArt graphics, and tables in Office 2010 documents when transferred from a computer and saved in Windows Mobile.
  • Touch Optimizations: There are optimizations for touch-based interaction including flick gestures and larger buttons.

System requirements[edit]

Office 2010 system requirements[3][4]

Minimum Recommended
Microsoft Windows
Operating system

Windows XP SP3, Windows Server 2003 SP2 (excluding x64 editions)
Windows Vista SP1, Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 10
Windows Server 2008, Windows Server 2008 R2, Windows Server 2012

CPU

500 MHz (1 GHz for Outlook with Business Contact Manager)

Memory

256 MB (1 GB for Outlook with Business Contact Manager)

512 MB

Free space

3 GB of free space (3.5 GB for Professional, Professional Academic, Professional Plus)

Graphics hardware

1024×768 (XGA) (1024×576 (WSVGA) for Home and Student, Home and Business)

DirectX 9.0c graphics processor and 64 MB video memory

Network

Internet access is required for product activation and online functionality

Input device(s)

Mouse and keyboard

Camcorder, scanner, or TWAIN-compatible digital camera for certain OneNote features
Microphone for speech recognition
Touchscreen for certain inking features

Reception[edit]

Critical reception[edit]

Office 2010 received mostly positive reviews upon its release, with particular praise devoted to the modified ribbon and the new Backstage view. Laptop Mag rated the suite 4 out of 5 stars, referring to it as “the best Office suite yet” because of the new customization options provided by the ribbon, the new multimedia editing capabilities, a new option to share presentations online via PowerPoint, and app response times; Microsoft’s decision to include OneNote in all retail versions of Office 2010 also received high praise.[32] PC Magazine also rated the suite 4 out of 5 stars for similar reasons; the inclusion of the ribbon in all programs was viewed favorably because it enhances consistency and usability, and the Backstage view was praised for simplifying access to file management and printing options. However, PC Magazine expressed dissatisfaction with the «intrusive» default auto formatting options in Word; the lack of an upgrade edition or pricing for users of a previous version of Office; and the stability of Office programs. Nevertheless, Office 2010 was regarded as a «dazzlingly attractive upgrade” that received the magazine’s Editors’ Choice and Best of the Year 2010 accolades.[33] Office 2010 also received positive reviews from Alphr,[163] PC Advisor,[164] PC World,[165] and TechRadar.[166]

Not all assessments and reviews were positive. InfoWorld considered the modified Ribbon in Office 2010 to be a «disorganized mess», and the user-interface conventions to be confusing because of the lack of consistency across routine functions. The Backstage view was also criticized for «containing a schizophrenic array of buttons, button menus, and hyperlink-like text labels» and for being presented as a full-screen interface instead of as a drop-down menu similar to Paint and WordPad in Windows 7. Sluggish performance was also a subject of criticism, although the review was written before development of the product had been formally completed.[167]

Reactions to the various product versions, including the 64-bit version of Office 2010, were mixed. Ars Technica believed that Microsoft’s transition to a 64-bit version of Office would facilitate the industry’s adoption of 64-bit software.[23] However, concerns about backward compatibility and performance issues were raised.[168][169] After the product’s launch, Microsoft stated that «the 64-bit version of Office 2010 is likely to introduce compatibility issues» and recommended the 32-bit version for most users;[170] the Office 2010 setup program installs the 32-bit version by default unless a 64-bit version is already installed on the target machine.[22][169] In a departure from previous versions of Office, Microsoft did not offer an upgrade version of Office 2010—a move that was criticized for effectively increasing the cost of the product for users already running a previous version.[168][171][172] While the new Product Key Card program was considered to be an affordable alternative to an upgrade version because of its affordability when compared with a full retail purchase,[172][173] it presented a limitation not seen with a full retail version in that its license prohibited the software from being transferred to another machine.[173][174]

The Starter edition of Office 2010 received mostly positive reviews;[175][176][177] a feature omitted from other editions of Office 2010 that received praise was To-Go Device Manager, which allowed users to copy Office 2010 Starter installation files to a USB flash drive and use its programs on another PC, even one where a version of Office was not installed.[175][177] However, criticism was directed at the edition’s lack of functionality and its mandatory advertisements.[178][179][180]

Sales[edit]

The initial two-week sales of Office 2010 were lower than those previously observed with the suite’s predecessor, Office 2007, a fact considered by Stephen Baker of NPD Group to be “disappointing.”[34][181][182] Baker attributed this lack of sales to «a seasonally slow period for PC purchases» and an «increasingly saturated installed base.» Free alternatives to the productivity suite such as Google Docs were not regarded as detrimental to the adoption of Office 2010;[34][181] however, this view was not shared by all journalists.[183][184] In spite of initial sales that were lower than expected, sales of Office 2010—particularly consumer sales—contributed to a record first-quarter profit for Microsoft during its 2011 fiscal year.[36][185][186][187][188] While other products contributed to this record, Microsoft Business Division, the division responsible for Office, earned the highest percentage of total revenue during this time period.[187][189] As of November 1, 2010, over six million copies of Office 2010 were sold, a figure that represented «more than 30 copies being sold every minute.»[190]

Details related to Microsoft’s second-quarter earnings during the company’s 2011 fiscal year were posted on January 27, 2011, showing that the company had set a record for second-quarter revenue of $19.95 billion. The Microsoft Business Division grew by 24% year-over-year, with Office 2010 becoming the fastest-selling consumer version of Office in history; license sales of Office 2010 were also «over 50% ahead of Office 2007 over an equivalent period following launch.»[191][192][193] Results during the company’s third-quarter 2011 fiscal year were later strong, with Microsoft’s Business division expecting to see «Office sales exceed PC demand in fiscal 2011.”[194]

On June 15, 2011, a year after Office 2010’s general availability, Microsoft Office corporate vice president Takeshi Numoto stated that deployment of the productivity suite among business customers was “five times faster” than that of its predecessor, Office 2007, and that the latest version was “the fastest-selling consumer version of Office ever” with a copy being sold every second since the product launched;[35] the claim was previously made by Microsoft in January during the Consumer Electronics Show.[195][196] Based on this claim, Network World estimated that an approximate 31.5 million licenses were sold since Office 2010’s launch.[35] Office Online proved to be popular as well, with Nuoto stating that it had seen over 50 million unique visitors since its launch.[35] By July 2011, over 100 million licenses were sold,[197] which contributed to record Q4 earnings and annual revenue.[198] However, year-over-year consumer revenue for Office had declined by 8 percent, though revenue from Microsoft’s Business Division had increased by 27 percent during the same period.[199] During the second quarter of Microsoft’s 2012 fiscal year, the company reported a revenue of $20.9 billion—another record for the company—with Office 2010 being a contributing factor, having sold nearly 200 million licenses as of December 31, 2011,[37] in spite of declining Windows sales.[200]

Microsoft reportedly discontinued sales of Office 2010 on January 31, 2013, just two days after its successor, Office 2013, reached general availability.[38]

Enterprise adoption[edit]

According to a survey conducted by market research company Forrester Research in 2011 with a sample consisting of 150 North American and European enterprise executives, Office 2010 was in use by 52% of respondents, behind Office 2003 or earlier and Office 2007 at 74% and 72%, respectively.[201] In a 2013 survey, Office 2010 was the dominant productivity suite when compared to previous versions and competitors’ offerings with a total of 85% usage share among the 155 enterprise survey respondents.[202] According to a 2017 survey, Office 2010 was the most used edition of Microsoft Office among organizations with a usage share of 83% — surpassing Office 2007 at 68% and Office 2003 at 46%, respectively. About 53% of respondents were also using Microsoft 365 (then Office 365).[203]

See also[edit]

  • Microsoft Office for Mac 2011
  • Comparison of office suites
  • List of office suites

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External links[edit]

  • Official website
  • Office 2010 product guides
  • Downloads for Office 2010
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OC Windows Почитать описание
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Разработчик Как установить программу
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Программное приложение Word является составным элементом офисного комплекта Office от компании Microsoft. Ворд 2010 хорошо работает на новых версиях Windows 10 и 7 без каких то лагов в работе, большинство проблем с программой в основном связанно с самим ПК пользователей.

Существует семь вариантов комплектации Word 2010, предназначенных для выполнения задач широкого спектра. Например «Стартовый» подойдет для обычного пользователя, тогда как «Профессионал Плюс» имеет гораздо больше элементов для оформления и презентации документов, что предопределяет его применение на предприятиях.

Приложение Платформа Распаковщик Интерфейс Скачивание Загрузка

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Грамотно реализованная эргономика управления, удобные возможности форматирования и систематизации, а также встроенный инструментарий позволяют организовывать благоприятную среду как для индивидуальной, так и коллективной работы.

Как установить Word 2010

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Microsoft Office 2010 бесплатно установить скрин 1

Нажмите «Далее», или снимите галочки с рекомендуемого ПО и нажмите «Далее». Если снять все галочки, рекомендуемое доп. ПО не установится!

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офис 2010 ворд

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ход выполнения установки Офис 2010


Внимание!! при первом запуске сделать так.не вносить изменения office 2010


Функциональность Word 2010

В составе Word 2010 немало инноваций, расширяющих возможности для пользователей.

Оптимизированная ленточная панель управления, которая в предыдущей версии Ворд вызывала только недоумение, позволяет предельно гибко подстраивать интерфейс под себя, что поднимает эффективность работы на совершенно иной уровень. Самые востребованные кнопки отмены, сохранения, копирования и повтора расположены в самом начале интерфейса. Редко используемые элементы скрываются и становятся доступны через выпадающий список в нижней его части.

word-2010-main

Новая реализация надстройки Office Backstage – внешнего управления документами. В отличие от версии 2007 года, обозначена она стандартно – кнопкой «Файл». При ее инициации, открывается отдельное окно, где представлен всевозможный набор файловых манипуляций, значительно расширенный по сравнению с прошлыми редакторами. Отметим, что теперь готовые документы можно сохранять в PDF-формате, отправлять в виде письма по электронной почте, сразу публиковать в блогах и закреплять в специальном облачном хранилище – SkyDrive.

Появилась возможность анимации шрифтов с помощью надстроечных элементов «Шрифт» и «Стили», расположенных на главной вкладке. В наличии как предустановленные литеры (20 видов), так и инструментарий для собственного их формирования вплоть до расстановки меж строчных интервалов, настройки отражений, уровня подсветки и теней.

В редактор текста Word 2010 разработчики интегрировали SmartArt – средство для визуализации представляемого документа, что улучшает его воспринимаемость. В редакторе также переработаны действия с вставкой геометрических элементов и диаграмм – пользователь может их подгонять и стилистически согласовывать между собой на основе предустановленных разработчиками шаблонов. В этой же подгруппе на вкладке «Вставка» предусмотрено другое нововведение – функция частичного или полноценного снимка экрана.

Microsoft word is probably Microsoft’s most used application. Furthermore, it is one of the most user-friendly apps you can ever come across; even kids can have a shot at it. For all your document creation, editing, and saving, this is the best application.

Since its launch years ago, different versions have been released into the market. The more recent the app’s release date, the more advanced and better features it wields. However, most of the features are similar in all the released versions.

This is how these different versions compare against each other:

What Do Microsoft Word 2010, 2013, 2016, and 2019 Have in Common?

Microsoft Word Purpose

This application was developed to help users type and save documents. As such, no matter how upgraded or the most recent version is, the primary purpose is the same for all of them. All the features that each of these versions has been aimed at making the Word processing experience better. 

You can comfortably use any of these versions of Word to create and edit your documents. Nevertheless, the whole experience differs from a different version. 

Saving and Printing

After creating and editing your document, all versions of Ms word give you the option of saving your text in the location of your choice. You can save your document locally on your computer or even on an external storage device like a flash disk. 

Furthermore, Ms word offers you a print option in case you want to get a hard copy of your document. You can resize and adjust your document for the print type of your choice. 

Cloud and Local Support

Traditional word applications only enabled you to access them locally by installing them on your computer, but with this version, things are more advanced. You can comfortably access these versions through your web browser.

Moreover, in addition to saving your documents locally, you can keep them on a Microsoft cloud system. In a cloud system, you can access your work whenever and wherever you need them.

Built-in Collaboration

All these versions allow access and manipulation of the same document by different people. Multiple individuals can edit the same text, unlike in the older versions, which dictated one user at a time. 

Supporting Diverse Usage

Ms. Word is an application that is not limited to a particular individual user. Students, business people, writers, and home users are all encompassed in the usage of this software. All these versions come with different features that suit each user according to their needs. 

Compatibility

Each of these versions is compatible with a later version of itself. For instance, you can open and work on a document created with ms word 2013 on ms word 2016. Furthermore, you can save your files in Rich Text Format, which is compatible across all the versions. 

As such, if you have recently upgraded to a newer version, no need to worry that your documents will not open.

Formatting Features

Ms word flaunts multiple and diverse formatting features that seek to make document editing perfect. You can select desirable fonts, color text, create tables, format paragraphs, insert images, and hyperlink to your document. Furthermore, you can add headers and footers, page breaks, and line breaks, among other formatting features. 

All these features are present in all versions of Word.

How Do These Versions of Microsoft Word Compare Against Each Other?

In consideration of features and better document processing capabilities, this is how each of these versions stood out:

Microsoft Word 2010

Upon its release, it was highly regarded since it came with better features and lots of improvements that made the Word processing experience more bearable. This could be viewed from the following perspectives:

The Ribbon

Although initially was hard to work with for new users, continued use of the app made users like it. The ribbon makes different features more visible and discoverable hence making navigation faster and easier.

The simplest of tasks such as bulleting, outlining, changing fonts, and the color is faster and easier, unlike in older versions. The clarity of the ribbon is something to be admired about this version.

Ribbon

Protected View

Before the release of this version, security was not a consideration for word developers. However, this version attempted to keep in check the security aspect by introducing a protected view. Such allows you to view a risky document in a sandbox.

Protected View

Backstage

This is probably the most significant improvement that Microsoft made on WordWord back in the day. Backstage is a simple interface that relieves the ribbon of carrying all functionality tools and features. It manages the security, printing, saving, and sharing of your files. Furthermore, it holds the option and Helps with menus. 

Backstage is where you look for any option you might be missing on the ribbon.

Backstage

Collaboration and Sharing

Before sharing your documents, ms word 2010 has a document inspector that cleans up and secures your file. Once your text is secure, you can then choose a preferred sharing option backstage.

You can email your document or save it on Skydrive from whence you can share through other means. Furthermore, this app allows you to share more than one document at a time.

Collaboration and Sharing

Editing Tools

With older versions, some editing tasks like copy-pasting were quite a hustle. However, this app made things easier. You can copy and paste a document from a different source and choose whether to retain its format or change it through the in-line editing menu.

Furthermore, this app allows you to edit images directly within Word.

Editing Tools

Microsoft Word 2013

Microsoft also made some more improvements in word 2013 to improve on user experience. Such included the following:

A New Look

Initially, when you fired up WordWord, a blank document was your first stop. However, with word 2013, you have yourself a landing page. In the left pane is a list of your recent works, while on the right pane is a collection of templates. You can work with an invoice, a blog post, among others.

A new, improved ribbon is also present on the landing page. A design format tab was also added for more formatting options.

A New Look

Sharing and Collaboration

Like in windows 2010, you can also share documents through SkyDrive. However, with this version, you can share with people who don’t have WordWord installed on their computers. They can access the text through a link which they can open on their browsers. 

 Sharing and Collaboration

Editing Tools

There was always the problem of scrappy work whenever many people edited a document. However, with the Simple Markup tool, the word 2013 solved this issue. The app displays the final edited text but shows lines where the work was edited. 

Furthermore, you can deal with comments made on your document with ease as you do on Facebook. There is a small speech bubble icon that leads to the comments session. You can also lock Track your documents so that one needs password clearance to edit your work.

Cloud Services

This version has incorporated the use of SkyDrive as a default storage location. You can always access your document for editing through your browser on your PC or tablet.

Cloud Services

Read Mode

Sometimes you need to read a document, but the distractions around the word window knock you off. Word 2013 has a read mode to provide a minimalist-distraction-free view of your document.

The read mode sets the page color to sepia or white, and your text is organized into columns increating a free-flowing read mode.

If you need to stop, Word saves the document so you can access it later.

Multimedia

Word 2013 made working with images easier. New tools were added to ensure you can efficiently deal with pictures in WordWord, you can insert, drag, and edit images.

With this app, you can add web photos and videos from online platforms directly to your Word document. To add a video, there is an «Online Video» tab that you tap to select and add your video. 

Multimedia

Editing PDFs

Traditionally, with older versions, editing PDFs called for extra plug-is or workarounds, but with word 2013, this is a functional feature. 

Microsoft Word 2016

Microsoft Word 2016 is set apart from its preceding versions by the following features:

Tell Me What to Do Tool

With this version, you do not have to keep navigating through menus to get your options. The «Tell Me What to Do Tool» comes in handy. All you have to do is type in your prospect, and WordWord takes you to your destination. 

Such a tool saves you the torture of having to memorize menus and gives you a time edge.

tell me feature

Smark Lookup

This is another fantastic tool that allows you to look up words or phrases for correct definitions or meanings. You click on a word and select smart lookup and windows the available databases for options.

Smark Lookup

Ink Equation

For those working with numbers, this is a time-saver tool. The tool allows you to create complex equations using your finger, mouse, or any other input mechanism then translates the equation into computer text. 

To access this tool, you select «Equation, Ink Equation» in the insert tab. A canvas is consequently unleashed from whence you type your equation.

Ink Equation

Improved Version History

Word 2016 does not dictate how you save a document. You could save it in its original format if you imported it from another source.

Improved Version History

Sharing and Co-authoring in Real-Time

This version has incorporated a share button on the screen; you can quickly hit to share your documents through OneDrive or SharePoint. Once you hit the button, a link is generated that you can share with your friends or colleagues.

You can also concurrently edit the same document that you have saved on OneDrive or SharePoint with your friends.

Sharing and Co-authoring in Real-Time

Microsoft Word 2019

Here is the most recent, most upgraded, and most advanced version of Word. To the satisfaction of users, it has also come with several desirable features that place it above all other versions. Such include:

See Others in Real-time

While its predecessor allowed you to work on the same document with your colleagues, this will enable you to see who the colleague is. You can concurrently work on the same text as your friend and see what changes they are making to the document.

See Others in Real-time

Microsoft Translator

Language is no longer a communication barrier with the Word 2019. The app comes with a translator that allows translating words, phrases, or sentences into other languages. All you have to do is hit the review tab on the ribbon and get started.

Microsoft Translator

LaTex Syntax

Word through this version supports LaTex math syntax to create and work with mathematical equations. You can select this option by selecting it on the equations tab on the insert menu.

When you select the LaTex Syntax option, other math symbols and structures are at your disposal.

LaTex Syntax

Working with 3D Images

You can now insert and work with 3D images in WordWord by this app. You can even rotate them up to an angle of 360 degrees.

To insert such an image, you select 3D models on the From Online Sources tab on the insert menu, and you can make your selection of the picture.

Working with 3D Images

Digital Pens

Incorporation of this feature allows you to write, draw, or highlight texts in the most natural way. With this feature, you can enjoy doing calculations, making drawings, and converting ink into shapes. 

Digital Pens

Improved Visual Impacts

You can now add icons and scalable vector graphics to your documents. You can further edit by applying colors and effects as you please.

Improved Visual Impacts

Word application versions all seek to serve the same purpose, document creation, and formatting. However, each serves the goal with a different degree of intensity, comfortability, and ease. The more recent version, the better features it displays, the latest versions are an improvement on the flaws of their predecessors.

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Microsoft Office 2010 800px-Microsoft Office 2010.svg.png (codenamed Office 14) is a version of the Microsoft Office productivity suite for Microsoft Windows that was released to manufacturing on April 15, 2010, and made available for retail on June 15, 2010. It is the successor to Microsoft Office 2007 and the predecessor to Microsoft Office 2013. The macOS equivalent, Office for Mac 2011, was released on October 26, 2010.

Office 2010 introduces user interface enhancements including a Backstage view that consolidates document management tasks into a single location. The ribbon introduced in Office 2007 for Access, Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, and Word is the primary user interface for all apps and is fully customizable in Office 2010. Other new features include extended file format support; co-authoring features that enable multiple users to share and simultaneously edit documents; OneDrive and SharePoint integration; and security improvements such as Protected View, a read-only, isolated sandbox environment to protect users from potentially malicious content. It also debuted Office Online—formerly Office Web Apps—a collection of free web-based versions of Excel, OneNote, PowerPoint, and Word. Office Starter 2010, a new edition of Office, replaced Microsoft Works. Office Mobile 2010, an update to Microsoft’s mobile productivity suite, was released on May 12, 2010 as a free upgrade from the Windows Phone Store for Windows Mobile 6.5devices with a previous version of Office Mobile installed.

Office 2010 is the first version of Office to ship in two variants for IA-32 and x64, but the x64 version is not compatible with Windows XP or Windows Server 2003. It is also the first version to require product activation for volume license editions. Office 2010 supports Windows XP SP3, Windows Server 2003 SP2, Windows Vista SP1 or a later version, though it could be installed on older service packs of XP through a registry exploit. It’s the last version of Microsoft Office compatible with Windows XP, Windows Vista, Windows Sevrer 2003 and Windows Server 2008 as its successor, Office 2013, does not support these operating systems.

Reception to Office 2010 was generally positive, with critics praising the new Backstage view interface, the new customization options for the ribbon, and the incorporation of the ribbon into all apps. While sales were initially lower than those of its predecessor, Office 2010 was a success for Microsoft and surpassed the company’s previous records for adoption, deployment, and revenue. As of December 31, 2011, approximately 200 million licenses of Office 2010 were sold, before its discontinuation on January 31, 2013.

Mainstream support for Office 2010 ended on October 13, 2015; extended support ended on October 13, 2020.

History and development

Development started in 2007 while Microsoft was finishing work on Office 12, released as Microsoft Office 2007. The version number 13 was skipped because of the fear of the number 13. It was previously thought that Office 2010 (then called Office 14) would ship in the first half of 2009.

On April 15, 2009, Microsoft confirmed that Office 2010 would be released in the first half of 2010. They announced on May 12, 2009, at a Tech Ed event, a trial version of the 64-bit edition. The Technical Preview 1 (Version: 14.0.4006.1010) was leaked on May 15, 2009.

An internal post-beta build was leaked on July 12, 2009. This was newer than the official preview build and included a «Limestone» internal test application (note: the EULA indicates Beta 2). On July 13, 2009, Microsoft announced Office 2010 at its Worldwide Partner Conference 2009.

On July 14, 2009, Microsoft started to send out invitations on Microsoft Connect to test an official preview build of Office 2010. On August 30, 2009, the beta build 4417 was leaked on the internet via torrents.

The public beta was available to subscribers of TechNet, MSDN and Microsoft Connect users on November 16, 2009.[49] On November 18, 2009, the beta was officially released to the general public at the Microsoft Office Beta website, which was originally launched by Microsoft on November 11, 2009 to provide screenshots of the new office suite.[50] Office 2010 Beta was a free, fully functional version and expired on October 31, 2010.[51]

In an effort to help customers and partners with deployment of Office 2010, Microsoft launched an Office 2010 application compatibility program with tools and guidance available for download.[52] On February 5, 2010, the official release candidate build 4734.1000 was available to Connect and MSDN testers. It was leaked to torrent sites.[53] A few days after, the RTM Escrow build was leaked.

Microsoft announced the RTM on April 15, 2010, and that the final version was to have speech technologies for use with text to speech in Microsoft OneNote, Microsoft PowerPoint, Microsoft Outlook, and Microsoft Word. Office 2010 was to be originally released to business customers on May 12, 2010,[54] however it was made available to Business customers with Software Assurance on April 27, 2010, and to other Volume Licensing Customers on May 1.[55] MSDN and TechNet subscribers have been able to download the RTM version since April 22, 2010. The RTM version number is 14.0.4763.1000.[56][57]

On June 15, 2010, Office 2010 reached general availability.[7][58]

Service packs

Service pack Version number Release date
Service Pack 1 (SP1) 14.0.6029.1000[59] November 17, 2010[60]
Service Pack 2 (SP2) 14.0.7015.1000[59] April 8, 2013[61]

Microsoft released a total of two service packs for Office 2010 that were primarily intended to address software bugs. Service Pack 1 (SP1) and Service Pack 2 (SP2) were released concurrently with updates for additional products such as Office Online, SharePoint, and SharePoint Designer.[60][61]

On November 17, 2010, Microsoft invited a select number of testers at the Microsoft Connect web portal to test the beta release of SP1.[62][63] SP1 was officially released by Microsoft on June 27, 2011 and included compatibility, performance, security, and stability improvements. SP1 is a cumulative update that includes all previous updates, as well as fixes exclusive to its release;[60][64] a list of exclusive fixes was released by Microsoft.[65] SP1 also introduced additional features for Access, Excel, OneNote, Outlook, PowerPoint, and Word. As examples, OneNote 2010 SP1 introduced the ability to open notebooks stored in OneDrive directly from within the app itself, while Outlook 2010 SP1 introduced Office 365 support.[64] With its release, the use of Office Online in Google Chrome and Internet Explorer 9 was officially supported by Microsoft for the first time.[66]

On April 8, 2013, a beta build of Office 2010 SP2 was released.[67] SP2 was a cumulative update officially released on July 16, 2013 and included all of the previously released compatibility, performance, stability, and security fixes, as well as numerous exclusive fixes;[61] a list of fixes exclusive to SP2 was released by Microsoft.[68] Microsoft claimed that with the release of SP2, Office 2010 would feature improved compatibility with Internet Explorer 10, Office 2013, SharePoint 2013, and Windows 8.[61][69] Because SP2 is cumulative, SP1 is not a prerequisite for its installation.[70]

New features

User interface

In both its client apps and its Internet implementation, the design of Office 2010 incorporates features from SharePoint and borrows from Web 2.0 ideas.[71][72][73] Office 2010 is also more «role-based» than previous versions, with specific features tailored to employees in «roles such as research and development professionals, sales people, and human resources.»[73]

Backstage view

The Info tab on the navigation pane of the Backstage view displaying an overview of the current document alongside management tasks in Word 2010.

A new Backstage view interface replaces the Office menu introduced in Office 2007 and is designed to facilitate access to document management and sharing tasks by consolidating them within a single location.[74] In theatre, backstage refers to the area behind the stage where behind the scenes activities and preparations commence; the Backstage view is accordingly an interface dedicated to activities and preparations before saving or sharing a document.[75] It consists of both a left-hand navigation pane and an adjacent main pane. The navigation pane includes a series of vertically arranged common commands to open or save files and tabs that, when opened, expose document management tasks and contextual information within the main pane.[74][76] A customizable number of recently opened documents can also be displayed within the navigation pane.[77]

Tasks that are accessed via tabs in the main pane are categorized into separate groups that display contextual information related to app configurations, files, and tasks; each tab displays contextual information relevant to that tab. On the Info tab in Word, for example, document metadata details are displayed within the Prepare for Sharing group to inform users of potentially personal information before the file is shared with other users,[78] whereas the Help tab displays Office version information and product licensing status.[79] In Office 2007, this information was included within separate locations.[78][79] From the Info tab, users can access revisions of currently open Excel, PowerPoint, and Word documents, as well as the latest unsaved version of a document that was previously closed.[80] Within the Print tab, the Backstage view also combines the previously separate print and print preview features by displaying printer tasks, settings, and a zooming user interface to preview the currently open document.[81]

The Backstage view, like the ribbon, is extensible; developers can add their own commands, tabs, tasks, and related information.[82][83][84]

File tab

The new File tab replaces the Office button introduced in Office 2007 and offers similar functionality. The previous Office button—a round button adorned with the Microsoft Office logo—had a different appearance from the ribbon tabs in the Office 2007 interface and was positioned away from them, with a target that extended toward the upper left corner of the screen in accordance with Fitts’s law.[77][85]Microsoft has stated that this button enhanced the usability of Office, but many users saw it as «branding decoration, rather than a functional button.» As a result, in Office 2010 it was replaced with a File tab that appears next to the other tabs in the ribbon instead of the upper left-hand corner of the screen.[77] The File tab is colored on a per-app basis (e.g., it is colored orange in Outlook). Opening the File tab displays the new Backstage view.[86]

Pasting options gallery

Office 2010 introduces a pasting options gallery on the ribbon, in the context menu, and in the object-oriented user interface that replaces the Paste Special dialog box and Paste Recovery feature seen in previous versions of Office. The gallery introduces Live Preview effects to the paste process when users position the mouse cursor over an option in the gallery so that the result of the process can be previewed before it is applied to the document; a tooltip with an associated description and keyboard shortcut for that option will also appear. If users position the mouse cursor over a gallery option in the context menu, the rest of the context menu becomes transparent so that it does not obstruct preview results within the document. To facilitate keyboard-based paste operations, users can navigate the gallery by using the arrow keys on a keyboard or press Ctrl after pressing Ctrl+V to display gallery options. Gallery options change based on the content in the clipboard and the app into which the content is pasted.[87]

Ribbon improvements

The ribbon interface, introduced in Office 2007, is fully customizable and included in all apps in Office 2010.[9][10] Users can add or rename custom ribbon tabs and groups, add additional commands to the default tabs, and hide tabs that are not used. Users can also export or import any customization changes made to the ribbon to facilitate backups, deployment, or sharing, or reset all ribbon customizations.[88]The ribbon was also updated with a visible interface option to minimize it, which leaves only the tabs exposed.[89]

After the launch of Office 2010, Microsoft provided free downloads for customized ribbons with a new «Favorites» tab that consolidated various commands based on customer feedback in regards to the most frequently used commands in Office; the customized ribbons were available as separate downloads for Access, Excel, InfoPath, OneNote, Outlook, PowerPoint, Project, Publisher, Visio, and Word.[90]

Other UI changes

  • The default color scheme in Office 2010 is silver instead of blue as in Office 2007 and now features a 5:1 contrast ratio to improve accessibility and readability.[86]
  • All app icons have been redesigned in Office 2010. The new icons are based on colors that correspond to their respective apps, as per previous releases, with an increased emphasis on app letters.[86]
  • The Office 2010 splash screen has been redesigned from the one seen in Office 2007 and animates when an app is launched.[86]
  • OneNote and PowerPoint support mathematical equations through an Equation Tools contextual tab on the ribbon.[91][92]
  • PowerPoint and Publisher include alignment guides so users can align objects to a grid.[92][93]
  • Smart tags, introduced in Office XP, have been renamed as Actions and are now accessible from the context menu.[94]

File formats

Office 2010 includes updated support for ISO/IEC 29500:2008, the International Standard version of Office Open XML (OOXML) file format.[6] Office 2010 provides read support for ECMA-376, read/write support for ISO/IEC 29500 Transitional, and read support for ISO/IEC 29500 Strict.[95] In its pre-release form, however, Office 2010 only supported the Transitional variant, and not the Strict.[96]

Office 2010 also continued support for OpenDocument Format (ODF) 1.1, which is a joint OASIS/ISO/IEC standard (ISO/IEC 26300:2006/Amd 1:2012 — Open Document Format for Office Applications (OpenDocument) v1.1).[6]

Office 2010 introduces co-authoring functionality in the Excel Web App, the OneNote Web App, and in the client versions of OneNote, PowerPoint, and Word for documents stored on SharePoint 2010 sites and for documents stored in shared folders by OneDrive.[12] Office 365 is also supported.[97] A co-authoring session is automatically initiated when two or more users open the same document. From the Backstage view users can also save documents directly to remote locations within Excel, OneNote, PowerPoint, and Word to facilitate remote access and co-authoring sessions. A Microsoft account is required to use Office 2010 functionality related to OneDrive.[12] In the Excel Web App, the OneNote Web App, and OneNote, edits to a shared document in a co-authoring session occur on a sequential basis, and appear in near real-time as a shared document automatically saves itself each time a co-author edits it. In PowerPoint and Word, users must upload changes to the server by manually saving the shared document.[12]

During a co-authoring session, the Excel Web App, PowerPoint, and Word denote how many co-authors are editing a document at a given time through an icon on the status bar. Clicking this icon in PowerPoint and Word displays contact information including the presence of co-authors; similar information can be accessed through the Info tab of the Backstage view. When co-authors click the name of another co-author, they can send an e-mail message with an email client or start instant messaging conversations with each other if a supported app such as Skype for Business is installed on each machine. If a conflict between multiple changes occurs in PowerPoint or Word, sharers can approve or reject changes before uploading them to the server.[12]

In both the OneNote Web App and OneNote, users can view the names of co-authors alongside their respective edits to the content in a shared notebook, or create separate versions of pages for individual use. Edits made since a notebook was last opened are automatically highlighted and the initials of the co-author who made an edit are automatically displayed. In the client version of OneNote, co-authors can also search for all edits to a notebook made by a specific co-author. OneNote 2010 notebooks can be shared with Office Mobile 2010 users on Windows Phone 7.[12] OneNote 2007 users can also participate in a co-authoring session with OneNote 2010 users if shared notebooks use the older OneNote 2007 file format; however, the aforementioned co-author search and page versioning features, as well as compatibility with the OneNote Web App, will not be available.[98]

Installation and deployment

Office 2010 introduces a new Click-to-Run installation process based on Microsoft App-V streaming and virtualization technology as an alternative to the traditional Windows Installer-based installation process for the Home and Student and Home and Business editions, and as a mandatory installation process for the Starter edition. Click-to-Run products install in a virtualized environment—a Q: partition—that downloads product features in the background after the apps themselves already been installed so that users can immediately begin using the apps. The download process is optimized for broadbandconnections.[99]

During the Office 2010 retail lifecycle Microsoft, in collaboration with original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) and retail partners, introduced a Product Key Card licensing program that allowed users to purchase a single license—at a reduced cost when compared with traditional retail media—to activate Home and Student, Home and Business, and Professional editions preinstalled on personal computers.[100] Product Key Card versions are restricted to a single machine.[101]

Volume license versions of Office 2010 require product activation. In Office 2007 product activation was only required for OEM or retail versions of the product.[27]

Security

Office File Validation

Office File Validation, previously included only in Publisher 2007 for PUB files, has been incorporated into Excel, PowerPoint, and Word in Office 2010 to validate the integrity of proprietary binary file formats (e.g., DOC, PPT, and XLS) introduced in previous versions of Microsoft Office. When users open a document, the structure of its file format is scanned to ensure that it conforms with specifications defined by XML schema; if a file fails the validation process it will, by default, be opened in Protected View, a new read-only, isolated sandbox environment to protect users from potentially malicious content.[102] this design allows users to visually assess potentially unsafe documents that fail validation.[103] Microsoft stated that it is possible for documents to fail validation as a false positive. To improve Office File Validation, Office 2010 collects various information about files that have failed validation and also creates copies of these files for optional submission to Microsoft through Windows Error Reporting.[102] Users are prompted approximately every two weeks from the date of a failed validation attempt to submit copies of files or of other information for analysis; prompts include a list of files that will be submitted to Microsoft and require explicit user consent prior to submission. Administrators can disable data submission.[104]

On December 14, 2010, Microsoft announced its intent to backport the Office File Validation feature to Office 2003 and Office 2007.[105][106] On April 12, 2011, Office File Validation was backported as an add-in for Office 2003 SP3 and Office 2007 SP2, and was later made available through Microsoft Update on June 28, 2011.[107] Office File Validation in Office 2003 and Office 2007 differs from the version in Office 2010 as these two releases do not include the Protected View feature. When users attempt to open a document that fails validation, they must first agree to a warning prompt before it can be opened.[107]Additionally, the configuration options in these two releases are only made available through the Windows Registry,[108] whereas Office 2010 also provides Group Policy options.[102]

Protected View

Protected View, an isolated sandbox environment for Excel, PowerPoint, and Word, replaces the Isolated Conversion Environment update available for previous versions of Microsoft Office. When a document is opened from a potentially unsafe location such as the Internet or as an e-mail attachment, or if a document does not comply with File Block policy or if it fails Office File Validation, it is opened in Protected View, which prohibits potentially unsafe documents from modifying components, files, and other resources on a system; users can also manually open documents in Protected View.[109] When a document is opened in Protected View, users are allowed to view, copy, and paste the contents of the document, but there are no options to edit, save, or print contents, and all active document content including ActiveXcontrols, database connections, hyperlinks, and macros is disabled.[110] Users can open documents outside of Protected View by clicking on the «Enable Editing» button that appears on a message bar within the Office user interface. As a precautionary measure, active content within a potentially unsafe document remains disabled when a user reopens it after exiting Protected View until a user clicks the «Enable Content» button on the message bar, which designates the document as a trusted document so that users are not prompted when it is opened in the future.[111]

Protected View is implemented as a separate child process instance of Excel, PowerPoint, and Word. The main process of each app is assigned the current user’s access token and hosts the Office user interface elements such as the ribbon, whereas the Protected View process consists of the document viewing area, parses and renders the document content, and operates with reduced privileges; the main process serves as a mediator for requests initiated by the separate process. In Windows Vista and later versions of Windows, Mandatory Integrity Control and User Interface Privilege Isolation further restrict the separate process.[109] Protected View is also available when Office 2010 is installed on Windows XP, but it is not as robust due to the absence of these security features.[112]

Trusted documents

Office 2010 allows users to designate individual documents as trusted, which allows all active content to operate each time a specific document is opened; trusted documents do not open in Protected View. Documents residing in either local or remote directories can be trusted, but users are warned if an attempt is made to trust a document from a remote resource. To increase security, documents in Temporary Internet Files and the TEMP directory cannot be trusted. Trusted document preferences, referred to as trust records, are stored within the Windows Registry on a per-user basis; trust records contain the full path to trusted documents and other information to protect users from social engineering attacks.[111]

Other security features

  • Office 2010 is the first version of Office to natively support Data Execution Prevention (DEP).[13] Office 2010 apps comply with DEP policies defined by an administrator and provide an option to disable DEP within the interface or Group Policy.[113]
  • A new Office ActiveX kill bit provides options to configure ActiveX controls within Office 2010 without affecting the operation of these controls within Internet Explorer.[13]
  • Additional Group Policy settings for File Block functionality in Excel, PowerPoint, and Word.[13]
  • Cryptography improvements, including support for Cryptography API: Next Generation in Access, Excel, InfoPath, OneNote, PowerPoint, and Word; Suite B support; and integrity validation of encrypted files.[13]
  • Document time stamping of digital signatures.[13]
  • Domain-based password complexity and enforcement policies.[13]

Graphics

Artistic effects

Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, and Word include a variety of artistic effects such as glass, paint stroke, pastel, and pencil sketch effects that users can apply to inserted images.[114]

Background removal

A new background removal feature based on Microsoft Research technology is included in Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, and Word to remove the backgrounds of images inserted into documents. It is exposed as a Remove Background command that appears on the Picture Tools contextual tab on the ribbon when an image is selected. When activated this command displays a separate Background Removal contextual tab and places a selection rectangle and magenta color over portions of the selected image. The selection rectangle determines, based on an algorithm, which area of the selected image will be retained once the background removal process is complete, whereas the magenta color indicates the areas that will be removed. Users can manually adjust the position and size of the selection rectangle and also mark individual areas of an image to keep or remove;[115] it is also possible to delete a mark after an inadvertent selection or if it produces an undesired result. After the background has been removed, users can apply various visual effects to the result image or wrap text in a document around it; users can also crop the image since removing the background does not reduce its original size.[116]

Cropping improvements

Office 2010 introduces improvements to the image crop process in Excel, Outook, PowerPoint, Word. The crop selection rectangle now grays out the portions of an image to be removed during a crop process and displays the result area in color, instead of completely removing all portions of an image outside of the selection rectangle from view as in previous versions of Office; images can now be repositioned underneath the selection rectangle while it is active. A new Aspect Ratio option under the Crop command on the ribbon presents a drop-drop down menu with options for both landscape and portrait page orientations to customize the aspect ratio of the selection rectangle before users crop an image, which automatically resizes the selection rectangle when users start the crop process; users can manually resize the selection rectangle and simultaneously preserve its aspect ratio by resizing it from its corners while pressing the ⇧ Shift key.[117] The aforementioned cropping improvements are also available in Publisher.[118]

The Picture Shape command in previous versions of Office has been replaced with a new Crop to Shape command that allows users to resize and move the selected shape during the crop process. By default, Office 2010, like previous versions, automatically resizes images that are inserted into shapes, which can negatively affect their aspect ratio. To address this, images in shapes can now be cropped or resized after being inserted, and individual Fit and Fill options have been incorporated. The former option resizes the selected image so that the entire area of the crop selection rectangle or shape is filled, whereas the latter option resizes the image so that it is displayed within the selection rectangle or within a shape in its entirety; both options maintain the original aspect ratio of the selected image. Images inserted into SmartArt diagrams can also be cropped, resized, or repositioned.[117]

Font effects and enhancements

Excel, PowerPoint, and Word support text effects such as bevels, gradient fills, glows, reflections, and shadows. Publisher and Word support OpenType features such as kerning, ligatures, stylistic sets, and text figures with fonts such as Calibri, Cambria, Corbel, and Gabriola.[114]

Hardware acceleration

Office 2010 apps including Excel, PowerPoint, and Word support hardware accelerated graphics when installed on a machine with a DirectX 9.0c-compliant GPU that has at least 64 MB of video memory. Excel supports hardware accelerated chart drawing, and PowerPoint supports hardware accelerated animations, transitions, and video playback and effects; slideshow elements are now rendered as sprites, which are then composited with additional effects such as fades and wipes implemented using Pixel Shader 2.0. All Office 2010 apps support Direct3D hardware accelerated SmartArt and WordArt object and text rendering.[119] Additionally, the background removal feature and image adjustments such as brightness and contrast are all accelerated when used on capable hardware.[120]

Screenshot capture

Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, and Word allow users to immediately insert a screenshot of open app windows or a selection of content on the screen into documents without saving the image as a file. The functionality is exposed through a new Screenshot command on the Insert tab of the ribbon that, when clicked, presents individual options to capture either app windows or selections of content. The former option presents open windows as thumbnails in a gallery on the ribbon that insert a screenshot of the selected window into the active app, while the latter option minimizes the currently active app, dims the screen, and presents a selection rectangle for users to create a screenshot by holding the main mouse button, dragging the selection rectangle to a desired area of the screen, and then releasing the button to automatically insert the selection as an image into the document. Only windows that have not been minimized to the taskbar can be captured. After a screenshot has been inserted, various adjustments can be made.[121]

SmartArt improvements

SmartArt, a set of diagrams introduced in Office 2007 for Excel, Outlook, PowerPoint, and Word, has been updated with new effects, options, and interface improvements. The SmartArt text pane now allows users to insert, modify, and reorder images and their associated text within a diagram, and new Move Up and Move Down commands on the ribbon facilitate the reordering of content. Images are automatically cropped when inserted into shapes within SmartArt diagrams to preserve their aspect ratio; users can also manually reposition images. During the crop process, the layout of shapes in SmartArt diagrams is locked to prevent users from inadvertently modifying its position while making adjustments to an image.[117] Approximately 50 new diagrams have been introduced. Of these, a new Picture category dedicated to the presentation of images includes over 30 diagrams, and the Organization Chart category includes 3 new diagrams.[122]

A new Convert command on the SmartArt contextual tab on the ribbon includes additional features for Excel and PowerPoint. The Convert to Shapes command, a feature introduced in Office 2007 SP2 as a context menu option that turned SmartArt into a group of customizable shapes, is now featured as on option on the ribbon in both apps. Additionally, in PowerPoint, it is possible to convert SmartArt diagrams into bulleted lists through a new Convert to Text option.[122]

Accessibility

Accessibility Checker

Office 2010 introduces an Accessibility Checker feature in Excel, PowerPoint, and Word that inspects documents for issues that could negatively affect visually impaired readers. Accessibility Checker can be accessed through the «Check for Issues» button on the Prepare for Sharing group on the Info tab of the Backstage view. Clicking the button opens a task pane with a list of accessibility issues discovered in the document and also provides suggestions to address these issues. The Backstage view also reports accessibility issues in the Prepare for Sharing group so that they can be addressed before the document is shared with other users.[123] Administrators can configure how prominently this information is displayed within the interface through Group Policy.[124]

Language preferences

A Language Preferences interface in Access, Excel, OneNote, Outlook, PowerPoint, Project, Publisher, Visio, and Word is accessible in the Backstage view and replaces the language customization interface seen in previous versions of Office.[125] The new interface provides information about currently installed language packs and their related components, hyperlinks to download additional content, and a new ScreenTip Language feature that allows users to customize the language of tooltips.[126]

Text-to-speech improvements

A new Mini Translator feature allows users to translate selected text in OneNote, Outlook, PowerPoint, and Word. Translations for phrases or words are displayed within a tooltip, from which users can hear an audio pronunciation of the selected text provided by one of the Microsoft text-to-speech voices installed on a machine, copy the translation to the clipboard so that it can be inserted into another document, or view a definition provided by an online service if the selected text is a word.[127] The audio pronunciations are made available through a Speak feature, which can be accessed separately from the Mini Translator (e.g., added to the ribbon), but it can only be activated if a text-to-speech engine that matches the language of the selected text is installed. Users can download various text-to-speech engines from Microsoft.[128] The Speak feature is not available when Office 2010 is installed on Windows XP.[129]

New app-specific features

New features in Word 2010
  • A new navigation pane replaces the document map in previous versions of Word and allows users to drag and drop headings within the pane to rearrange pages in a document. The navigation pane also replaces the Find dialog box in previous versions and now highlights search results.[130]
  • Windows Live Writer integration.[9]
New features in Excel 2010
  • Excel 2010 includes a redesigned calculation engine to improve performance in response to feedback from users related to previous versions of Excel.[119] As part of the new calculation engine, a new version of the Solver add-in and new versions of statistical functions were introduced.[131]
  • Graphing features including Sparklines, miniature graphics that represent trends among data; and Slicers, which allow users to quickly filter data results.[131]
  • Macro recording support for chart elements.[131]
  • Rule-based cell formatting.[131]
  • The number of data points in a data series is limited only by available memory; in Excel 2007, there was a limitation of 32,000 data points.[131]
New features in PowerPoint 2010
  • A new Reading View allows users to display and progress through presentations in a window.[92]
  • An Animation Painter allows users to select and copy an animation and apply it to another slide.[92]
  • Audio editing and playback functionality allows users to fade, bookmark, or trim audio.[92]
  • Presentation sections allow users to visually customize the organization of slides in a presentation.[92]
  • Support for custom shapes.[92]
  • The ability to remotely broadcast a slide show («Broadcast Slide Show») with the use of a Microsoft account; local broadcasts through SharePoint are supported.[92]
  • Users can simulate a laser pointer with a mouse cursor by holding down the Ctrl key and pressing the primary mouse button during a presentation.[92]
  • Video editing and playback functionality; local videos are now embedded within slides by default so that they can be played regardless of whether users have access to their original source. Options include the ability to add various visual effects, to bookmark specific scenes for playback when advancing slides, to fade in or out, and to trim videos. Online videos can also be inserted into presentations, and presentations themselves can be saved as videos.[92]
New features in OneNote 2010
  • A native x64 printer driver for x64 operating systems.[132]
  • A new docked mode enables OneNote to be displayed alongside next to another app window while taking notes.[91]
  • A notebook recycle bin, which stores for 60 days any notebooks, pages, sections, and section groups that were previously deleted.[91]
  • A Quick Filing feature allows users to choose which location in a notebook to quickly send information to from within other apps.[132]
  • Linked Notes reference specific sections of a source document or web page so that clicking a note that was taken while the source was open will automatically return users to that content;[132] Internet Explorer 6 and later versions, PowerPoint 2010, and Word 2010 support Linked Notes.[91]
  • Incremental search has been incorporated and future search results are prioritized based on previous search queries.[91]
  • Multi-touch pan and pinch gestures when installed on a multi-touch capable operating system such as Windows 7.[132]
  • Outlook tasks can be created directly from OneNote.[132]
  • Page versioning, which allows multiple versions of a single page to exist in a notebook.[91]
  • Sections can be copied or merged.[91]
  • Style galleries, similar to those in Word, have been included in OneNote to provide basic formatting options.[91]
  • Support for automatic text wrapping.[132]
  • XPS documents protected by information rights management can be inserted as printouts.[132]
  • The ability to sync notebooks with a Microsoft account;[132] SP1 introduced the ability to open notebooks from OneDrive.[64]
  • The Format Painter in Word is available in OneNote.[91]
  • Wiki-style bracket syntax can be used to link to pages, sections, and section groups from other locations in a notebook.[91]
New features in Outlook 2010
  • A new Search Tools contextual tab is displayed on the ribbon when users perform a search and provides commands to filter results based on different criterion.[133]
  • A Social Connector aggregates content from users’ social network contacts and displays related information such as activity feeds, appointments, communication history, and file attachments.[133]
  • An improved Conversation View groups messages by their subjects regardless of their originating folders. Additionally, a new Ignore command deletes all messages in a conversation and sends all future replies to the Deleted Items folder, while a new Clean Up command deletes all messages but the most recent.[133]
  • Quick Steps, individual collections of commands that allow users to perform multiple actions simultaneously. Users can create their own Quick Steps and optionally assign keyboard shortcuts or customize tooltips for each of them.[134]
  • Spell check is available in more areas of the Outlook interface including subject lines in e-mail messages, tasks, and meeting requests.[133]
  • Support for multiple Exchange accounts within a single Outlook profile.[133]
  • The default size limit for Unicode .ost and .pst files in Outlook 2010 is 50 GB instead of 20 GB as it was in Outlook 2007.[135]
  • The To-Do Bar introduced in Outlook 2007 includes additional customization options and visual indicators for conflicts and unanswered meeting requests.[133]
  • Users can adjust the zoom level of Outlook.[133]
  • Users are now notified before sending a message without a subject.[133]
  • Users are now able to change the IMAP Deleted Items folder location.
New features in Publisher 2010
  • A new Page Navigation pane presents thumbnails of each page in a document; clicking a thumbnail opens that page, while dragging it rearranges pages.[93]
  • Live Preview effects for formatting, objects, and text.[93]
  • Options to share building blocks and templates to the online Publisher user communities.[93]
  • The scratch area can now be hidden.[93]
New features in Access 2010
  • A Navigation Form interface allows database elements to be customized via drag-and-drop.[136]
  • An Image Gallery stores previously used images so that users can quickly reuse them in a database.[136]
  • Application Parts, predefined database templates.[136]
  • Data bars offer gradient fill options.[136]
  • Databases can be shared on the web via Access Services in Microsoft SharePoint Server 2010.[137]
  • Quick Start fields provide predefined groups.[136]
  • Web services can be used as external data sources.[137]

Removed features

Removed from the entire suite
  • Document workspaces.[126]
  • InterConnect support.[126]
  • Microsoft Office Document Imaging.[138]
  • Microsoft Office Document Scanning.[138]
  • Office Startup Assistant.[126]
  • Office Diagnostics.[126]
  • Research and Reference pane for Internet Explorer.[130]
  • Special symbol input add-in for East Asia versions.[126]
  • Support for MSXML version 5.[126]
  • Insert Clip Art task pane and various Clip Organizer features.[126]
Features removed from Word
  • AutoSummary feature.[130]
  • Support for Word Add-in Libraries (WLL).[130]
  • Voice comments feature,[139] previously available in Word 2002, Word 2003, and Word 2007, which allowed users to create a recording and directly insert it in a document.[140] For similar functionality, Voice Recorder can be used to record audio for later insertion in a document.[139]
Features removed from Excel
  • The Conditional Sum and Lookup wizards have been deprecated; a new Function wizard offers similar functionality.[131]
  • The Person Name smart tag has been removed.[130]
Features removed from PowerPoint
  • The maximum sound file size option has been replaced by the ability to embed files of any size, which provides similar options.[141]
  • The ability to save a presentation as a web page.[141]
  • Macro recording is hidden in Powerpoint 2007, but is completely removed in Powerpoint 2010
Features removed from OneNote
  • Live Session functionality, including the ability to start and join a live session; Microsoft touts the new Shared Notebook functionality as a replacement.[132]
  • List and Document task panes are no longer available.[132]
  • Options to create Outlook appointments or contacts.[132]
  • Outlining toolbar.[132]
  • SimpleImporter API.[132]
Features removed from Outlook
  • ANSI offline Outlook data files (.ost) for Exchange synchronization.[142]
  • Business Contact Manager;
    • Microsoft later released the add-in as a free download for Office 2010 Professional or Outlook 2010 consumers who purchased an edition of Office 2003 or Office 2007 with Business Contact Manager or Outlook 2003 or Outlook 2007.[143]
  • Calendar rebasing tool[142]
  • DAV connectivity for HTTP account types.
  • Exchange 2000 connectivity.[142]
  • Exchange Message Security feature support.[142]
  • Postmarks.[142]
  • Photo resize options for 640×480 (VGA) and 800×600 (SVGA) display resolutions.[142]
  • Search toolbar add-in.[142]
Features removed from Publisher
  • The ability to create new web publications or websites; users can still edit publications or websites created in earlier versions of Publisher.[144]
  • Various outdated publication settings.[144]
Features removed from Access
  • Calendar control.[137]
  • Data access pages.[137]
  • ISAM for Lotus 1-2-3. Paradox versions 3-7, Access 1.0, and Access 2.0 (Red 2 or Jet 2.0).[137]
  • Replication Conflict Viewer.[137]
  • Reports can no longer be exported as individual SNP files; Microsoft recommends that users export to PDF or XPS files.[137]
Features removed from Project
  • Custom forms support.[145]
  • Office Web Components resource availability graphs.[145]
  • Save as Excel Pivot Table has been deprecated; the ability to save directly into a Pivot Table is no longer available.[145]
  • Various add-ins have been removed.[145]
Features removed from Visio
  • Find Shape feature; users can instead search for new content online.[146]
  • ShapeStudio, available in previous versions of the Visio software development kit (SDK), has been removed from the Visio 2010 SDK.[146]
  • Users can no longer dock items to the top or to the bottom of the interface.[146]
  • Various status bar items.[146]

Editions

Comparison

Comparison of Microsoft Office 2010 editions[147][148][149][150]

Suites[151][152] As an individual product Starter Office Online Personal[a] Home and Student[b] Home and Business[c] Standard Professional3

Professional Academic[d]
University

Professional Plus[e]
Licensing scheme Varies OEM Free Retail and OEM Retail Retail Retail and Volume Academic and Retail Retail and Volume
Word Yes Starter edition Basic Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Excel Yes Starter edition Basic Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
PowerPoint Yes Viewer (Separate) Basic Viewer (Separate) Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
OneNote Yes No Basic No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Outlook Yes No No Yes No Yes Yes Yes Yes
Publisher Yes No No No No No Yes Yes Yes
Access Yes No No No No No No Yes Yes
InfoPath Yes No No No No No No No Yes
SharePoint Workspace Yes No No No No No No No Yes
SharePoint Designer Yes No No No No No No No No
Project Yes No No No No No No No No
Visio Yes Viewer (Separate) No Viewer Viewer Viewer Viewer (Separate) Viewer Viewer
Lync Yes No No No No No No No Volume channel only
Office Customization Tool (OCT)[f] No No No No No No Volume channel only No Volume channel only
Remarks
  1. ^ Office 2010 Personal was made available for distribution only in Japan.[152]
  2. ^ The retail version of Office 2010 Home and Student can be installed on up to three machines in a single household for non-commercial use only. The Product Key Card version only allows a single installation on a single machine.[101]
  3. ^ The retail versions of Office 2010 Home and Business and Office 2010 Professional can be installed on two devices including a primary machine, and a portable device such as a laptop, for use by a single user. The Product Key Card version only allows a single installation on a single machine.[101]
  4. ^ On February 1, 2012, Office 2010 University replaced the previous Office 2010 Professional Academic edition in an effort to curtail fraudulent product use.[153]
  5. ^ Office 2010 Professional Plus is only available for Volume License customers.[154] The retail version is offered through MSDN or TechNet.[155]
  6. ^ The Office Customization Tool is used to customize the installation of Office by creating a Windows Installer Patch (.MSP) file, and replaces the Custom Installation Wizard and Custom Deployment Wizard included in 2003 and earlier versions of the Office Resource Kit. It is only available in Volume License editions.[156]

Starter edition

Office Starter 2010 is an ad-supported product that was discontinued in June 2012, before the release of Office 2013 and Windows 8.[157] It included Word Starter and Excel Starter, reduced-functionality versions for viewing, editing, and creating documents. Office Starter 2010 was only available to OEMs to preload on Windows PCs and was intended as a replacement for Microsoft Works;[17][18][19] it is only compatible with Windows Vista and Windows 7.[158] Office Starter 2010 omits several features available in retail editions. Word Starter cannot insert footnotes, endnotes, citations, indexes, captions, equations, or SmartArt, and does not support customizations, macros, change tracking, full screen reading, or digital rights management.[159] Excel Starter does not support PivotTables, PivotCharts, custom views, external data connections, error checking, calculation steps, or circular references.[160] Office Starter 2010 is the only edition to offer a To-Go Device Manager feature, which allows users to install the productivity suite to a USB flash drive and run it temporarily on any computer with Windows Vista SP1 or Windows 7 installed to which the USB drive is connected.[161]

Office Online

Main article: Office Online

Office Online is a collection of free web-based versions of Excel, OneNote, PowerPoint, and Word that offers fewer features than its client counterparts.[15] It was released to OneDrive users before the general availability of Office 2010.[16]

Office Mobile 2010

Main article: Microsoft Office mobile apps

Office Mobile 2010 was released prior to the general availability of the Office 2010 client as a free upgrade for users of Windows Mobile 6.5 devices with a previous version of Office Mobile installed.[20] Some of the new features in Office Mobile 2010 include:[162]

  • Conversation View: Outlook Mobile threads related emails into a group for easier reading and management.
  • Presentation Companion: The add-on to PowerPoint Mobile allows users to control a presentation through their Windows Phone and display speaker notes.
  • SharePoint Workspace Mobile: Users can sync documents from SharePoint servers directly to their Windows Phone for offline viewing and editing.
  • Support for New Content in Office 2010: SmartArt graphics and charts can be displayed in Office Mobile.

System requirements

hideOffice 2010 system requirements[3][4]
Minimum Recommended
Microsoft Windows
Operating system Windows XP SP3 (excluding x64 editions), Windows Server 2003 SP2 with MSXML 6.0 (excluding x64 editions)

Windows Vista SP1, Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 10; Windows Server 2008, Windows Server 2008 R2, Windows Server 2012

CPU 500 MHz (1 GHz for Outlook with Business Contact Manager)
Memory 256 MB (1 GB for Outlook with Business Contact Manager) 512 MB
Hard drive 3 GB of free space (3.5 GB for Professional, Professional Academic, Professional Plus)
Graphics hardware 1024×768 (XGA) (1024×576 (WSVGA) for Home and Student, Home and Business) DirectX 9.0c graphics processor and 64 MB video memory
Network Internet access is required for product activation and online functionality
Input device(s) Mouse and keyboard Camcorder, scanner, or TWAIN-compatible digital camerafor certain OneNote features

Microphone for speech recognition
Touchscreen for certain inking features

Reception

Critical reception

Office 2010 received mostly positive reviews upon its release, with particular praise devoted to the modified ribbon and the new Backstage view. Laptop Mag rated the suite 4 out of 5 stars, referring to it as “the best Office suite yet” because of the new customization options provided by the ribbon, the new multimedia editing capabilities, a new option to share presentations online via PowerPoint, and app response times; Microsoft’s decision to include OneNote in all retail versions of Office 2010 also received high praise.[34] PC Magazine also rated the suite 4 out of 5 stars for similar reasons; the inclusion of the ribbon in all apps was viewed favorably because it enhances consistency and usability, and the Backstage view was praised for simplifying access to file management and printing options. However, PC Magazineexpressed dissatisfaction with the «intrusive» default auto formatting options in Word; the lack of an upgrade edition or pricing for users of a previous version of Office; and the stability of Office apps. Nevertheless, Office 2010 was regarded as a «dazzlingly attractive upgrade” that received the magazine’s Editors’ Choice and Best of the Year 2010 accolades.[35] Office 2010 also received positive reviews from Alphr,[163] PC Advisor,[164] PC World,[165] and TechRadar.[166]

Not all assessments and reviews were positive. InfoWorld considered the modified Ribbon in Office 2010 to be a «disorganized mess», and the user-interface conventions to be confusing because of the lack of consistency across routine functions. The Backstage view was also criticized for «containing a schizophrenic array of buttons, button menus, and hyperlink-like text labels» and for being presented as a full-screen interface instead of as a drop-down menu similar to Paint and WordPad in Windows 7. Sluggish performance was also a subject of criticism, although the review was written before development of the product had been formally completed.[167]

Reactions to the various product versions, including the 64-bit version of Office 2010, were mixed. Ars Technica believed that Microsoft’s transition to a 64-bit version of Office would facilitate the industry’s adoption of 64-bit software.[24] However, concerns about backward compatibility and performance issues were raised.[168][169] After the product’s launch, Microsoft stated that «the 64-bit version of Office 2010 is likely to introduce compatibility issues» and recommended the 32-bit version for most users;[170] the Office 2010 setup program installs the 32-bit version by default unless a 64-bit version is already installed on the target machine.[23][169] In a departure from previous versions of Office, Microsoft did not offer an upgrade version of Office 2010—a move that was criticized for effectively increasing the cost of the product for users already running a previous version.[168][171][172] While the new Product Key Card program was considered to be an affordable alternative to an upgrade version because of its affordability when compared with a full retail purchase,[172][173] it presented a limitation not seen with a full retail version in that its license prohibited the software from being transferred to another machine.[173][174]

The Starter edition of Office 2010 received mostly positive reviews;[175][176][177] a feature omitted from other editions of Office 2010 that received praise was To-Go Device Manager, which allowed users to copy Office 2010 Starter installation files to a USB flash drive and use its programs on another PC, even one where a version of Office was not installed.[175][177] However, criticism was directed at the edition’s lack of functionality and its mandatory advertisements.[178][179][180]

Sales

The initial two-week sales of Office 2010 were lower than those previously observed with the suite’s predecessor, Office 2007, a fact considered by Stephen Baker of NPD Group to be “disappointing.”[36][181][182] Baker attributed this lack of sales to «a seasonally slow period for PC purchases» and an «increasingly saturated installed base.» Free alternatives to the productivity suite such as Google Docs were not regarded as detrimental to the adoption of Office 2010;[36][181] however, this view was not shared by all journalists.[183][184] In spite of initial sales that were lower than expected, sales of Office 2010—particularly consumer sales—contributed to a record first-quarter profit for Microsoft during its 2011 fiscal year.[38][185][186][187][188] While other products contributed to this record, Microsoft Business Division, the division responsible for Office, earned the highest percentage of total revenue during this time period.[187][189] As of November 1, 2010, over six million copies of Office 2010 were sold, a figure that represented «more than 30 copies being sold every minute.»[190]

Details related to Microsoft’s second-quarter earnings during the company’s 2011 fiscal year were posted on January 27, 2011, showing that the company had set a record for second-quarter revenue of $19.95 billion. The Microsoft Business Division grew by 24% year-over-year, with Office 2010 becoming the fastest-selling consumer version of Office in history; license sales of Office 2010 were also «over 50% ahead of Office 2007 over an equivalent period following launch.»[191][192][193] Results during the company’s third-quarter 2011 fiscal year were later strong, with Microsoft’s Business division expecting to see «Office sales exceed PC demand in fiscal 2011.”[194]

On June 15, 2011, a year after Office 2010’s general availability, Microsoft Office corporate vice president Takeshi Numoto stated that deployment of the productivity suite among business customers was “five times faster” than that of its predecessor, Office 2007, and that the latest version was “the fastest-selling consumer version of Office ever” with a copy being sold every second since the product launched;[37]the claim was previously made by Microsoft in January during the Consumer Electronics Show.[195][196] Based on this claim, Network World estimated that an approximate 31.5 million licenses were sold since Office 2010’s launch.[37] Office Online proved to be popular as well, with Nuoto stating that it had seen over 50 million unique visitors since its launch.[37] By July 2011, over 100 million licenses were sold,[197]which contributed to record Q4 earnings and annual revenue.[198] However, year-over-year consumer revenue for Office had declined by 8 percent, though revenue from Microsoft’s Business Division had increased by 27 percent during the same period.[199] During the second quarter of Microsoft’s 2012 fiscal year, the company reported a revenue of $20.9 billion—another record for the company—with Office 2010 being a contributing factor, having sold nearly 200 million licenses as of December 31, 2011,[39] in spite of declining Windows sales.[200]

Microsoft reportedly discontinued sales of Office 2010 on January 31, 2013, just two days after its successor, Office 2013, reached general availability.[40]

Enterprise adoption

According to a survey conducted by market research company Forrester Research in 2011 with a sample consisting of 150 North American and European enterprise executives, Office 2010 was in use by 52% of respondents, behind Office 2003 or earlier and Office 2007 at 74% and 72%, respectively.[201] In a 2013 survey, Office 2010 was the dominant productivity suite when compared to previous versions and competitors’ offerings with a total of 85% usage share among the 155 enterprise survey respondents.[202]

External links

  • Office 2010: Product Guides at Microsoft Download Center
  • Microsoft Office 2010 at Wikipedia

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Wikipedia (article: Microsoft Office 2010 )

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When you need to create a document for work, school, or play, Microsoft Word 2010 for Windows is the best tool for the job. Microsoft Word 2010 for Windows is designed by the leading personal computer powerhouse Microsoft. Although this version of Microsoft Word was released in 2010, Microsoft has been creating word-processing software for decades. The first iteration of Microsoft Word was created in 1983 and has been refined over the years into a fully functional, flexible tool that it is today.

Microsoft Word 2010 for Windows is capable of creating a wide range of documents from movie scripts, to articles, school assignments, and even slides for presentations.

When you first open Microsoft Word 2010 for Windows, you will be prompted to create a new document. Once you have created a new document you will be faced with a blank canvas. From here, you have a wide variety of tools available to your disposable. There are hundreds of text fonts to choose from, and virtually any font can be added to the program.

Important text editing functions are included in the software, such as the ability to change font size, color, leading, kerning, and just about any other customization you can think of for text. Aside from editing text, Microsoft Word 2010 for Windows can create slides by inserting graphics, images, and photographs into your document. Microsoft Word 2010 for Windows is also capable of creating multiple file-formats, but the primary format used by this software is called .doc.

When you need software that will allow you any level of customization you need in a reliable package Microsoft Word 2010 for Windows is the best choice. It also has a built-in spellcheck function that highlights misspelled words in red and even suggests proper spelling or similar words in a drop-down menu. Editing documents has never been so easy, and you don’t even have to be a great speller to produce a flawless document. Formatting is also easy with Microsoft Word 2010 for Windows because you can choose whether you want to add bullet points or adjust the paragraph alignment.

Among the powerful tools available in Microsoft Word 2010 for Windows is the ability to sync with OneDrive, Microsoft’s cloud storage service. When you edit a document in Microsoft Word 2010 for Windows, it automatically saves the file, and it can easily be stored in your Microsoft OneDrive.

Access your documents from anywhere

Features:

  • Automatic spellcheck
  • Document sharing
  • Easily edit files on multiple devices
  • Automatically stays up-to-date
  • Format with ease

USER REVIEWS AND COMMENTS

image/svg+xmlBotttsPablo Stanleyhttps://bottts.com/Florian Körner


Cooper


I have been used Word 2010 for a couple of years and it really does me a GREAT favor. I depend on it to read paperwork in various formats, such as doc, PDFs. It makes my life easier to set Word as default software. Another attracting point is font styles in Word 2010. Even if you don’t want to pay membership fees, there are a bunch of pretty or creative fonts you could chose, that makes my word be innovative and clear when I want to create my diary.

image/svg+xmlBotttsPablo Stanleyhttps://bottts.com/Florian Körner


Leon


I love using Microsoft Word 2010 for Windows because it’s a powerful text editor and document processing tool. I love that it features text wrapping so you can bring in images and files directly. I also appreciate how easy it is to create hyperlinks from the text in my document. Finally, Microsoft makes it a cinch to convert my Word documents into PDFs.

image/svg+xmlBotttsPablo Stanleyhttps://bottts.com/Florian Körner


Luca Beimel


Microsoft Word 2010 is a word processing program that enables users to create and edit documents. It features a Ribbon-based user interface, which makes it easier to access the program’s features. Word 2010 also supports features such as document collaboration, advanced editing and formatting, and support for multimedia. It also integrates with Microsoft Office Web Apps, which allows users to access and edit their documents on the go.

image/svg+xmlBotttsPablo Stanleyhttps://bottts.com/Florian Körner


John I.


Microsoft Word 2010 is a powerful word-processing program with a lot of features. It has an intuitive user interface, making it easy to use. I found the auto-correct and spell check functions to be very helpful. It also allows you to easily insert pictures, tables, and charts into your documents. The ability to collaborate with other users is also an excellent feature. I like how you can easily create templates and customize them. The formatting options are also great, allowing you to customize the look of your documents. The ability to save documents as PDFs is a great time-saver. Overall, Microsoft Word 2010 is a great program for creating and editing documents.

image/svg+xmlBotttsPablo Stanleyhttps://bottts.com/Florian Körner


Arran E*******l


Microsoft Word 2010 is a feature-rich word processing software. It offers a wide range of tools to create and edit documents. Its user interface is intuitive and easy to learn. It also provides a great set of features for collaborating and sharing documents. Its document layout options are impressive, allowing you to customize and create professional documents quickly and easily.

image/svg+xmlBotttsPablo Stanleyhttps://bottts.com/Florian Körner


Finlay Z******y


Microsoft Word 2010 is a great softare for writting, editing and formatting your documents. It’s very user friendly and has lots of helpful featurese

image/svg+xmlBotttsPablo Stanleyhttps://bottts.com/Florian Körner


Blake H*********w


Microsoft Word 2010 is an intuitve and reliable softwre.

image/svg+xmlBotttsPablo Stanleyhttps://bottts.com/Florian Körner


Sean J******d


This popular word processing software from Microsoft allows users to create, edit, and format text documents with ease. Some of its key features include customizable templates, robust formatting tools, and the ability to collaborate with others in real-time. It also offers a range of editing and reviewing tools, as well as the ability to insert images and other media into documents. Additionally, Word 2010 includes handy tools like a word count tracker and thesaurus.

image/svg+xmlBotttsPablo Stanleyhttps://bottts.com/Florian Körner


Alfie Kirschenmann


Microsoft Word 2010 is a comprehensive word processing software that offers a wide range of features and tools for creating and editing documents.

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