Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is a history of the various versions of Microsoft Office, consisting of a bundle of several different applications which changed over time.This table only includes final releases and not pre-release or beta software.
SharePoint is a collection of enterprise content management and knowledge management tools developed by Microsoft.Launched in 2001, [6] it was initially bundled with Windows Server as Windows SharePoint Server, then renamed to Microsoft Office SharePoint Server, and then finally renamed to SharePoint.
Microsoft Forms (formerly Office 365 Forms) is an online survey creator, part of Office 365. [1] Released by Microsoft in June 2016, Forms allows users to create surveys and quizzes with automatic marking. [2] The data can be exported to Microsoft Excel and viewed live using the Present feature. [3] [4]
With Office 95, Microsoft Access 7.0 (a.k.a. "Access 95") became part of the Microsoft Office Professional Suite, joining Microsoft Excel, Word, and PowerPoint and transitioning from Access Basic to VBA. Since then, Microsoft has released new versions of Microsoft Access with each release of Microsoft Office.
Microsoft Visio (/ ˈ v ɪ z. i. oʊ / VIZ-ee-oh) (formerly Microsoft Office Visio) is a diagramming and vector graphics application and is part of the Microsoft 365 family. The product was first introduced in 1992 by former American software company Visio Corporation , and its latest version is Visio 2021.
Microsoft Office 2021 (third release codenamed Office 16) is a version of the Microsoft Office suite of applications for the Microsoft Windows and macOS operating systems. It was released on October 5, 2021. [6] A successor, Microsoft Office 2024 is expected to be rolled out in the second half of 2024. [7]
Premium features such as SharePoint support, version history and Microsoft Outlook integration were previously available only to Office 365 and Office 2013 customers, [10] [23] but on February 13, 2015, Microsoft removed all feature restrictions, except creation of local notebooks — the free edition only stores notebooks on OneDrive — from ...
I think the way the template is presented currently doesn't make Office 365 stand out and communicate what type of product it's about. Currently, the template places the same office product in multiple rows; yet, a subscription product such as Office 365, different from the other fixed price software, doesn't get its own category and row.