Microsoft is releasing the final version of Office 2016 for Mac today. After to testers for the past four months, Office 2016 for Mac is ready and available immediately to Office 365 subscribers. Office 2016 for Mac marks nearly five years since the last release of Office for Mac back in 2011, and Microsoft has made some modern changes to support how Office and OS X have changed over the years. There's a new user interface that feels like a mix of the fresh Windows design and Office for Mac 2011. The result is the familiar Ribbon user interface that fits in with the OS X theme and features like sandboxed apps, fullscreen view, and Retina screen optimization. A lot of improvements over Office for Mac 2011 Microsoft has also integrated its OneDrive cloud storage into Office 2016 for Mac, meaning you can quickly access recent documents you may have been editing on your smartphone, tablet, or Windows PC. ![]() Popular Alternatives to Power BI for Office 365 for Mac. Explore 21 Mac apps like Power BI for Office 365, all suggested and ranked by the AlternativeTo user community. There's even co-authoring support to allow several people to simultaneously edit a document. Microsoft has also added the familiar Windows shortcuts to its Office 2016 for Mac apps so you can can use ctrl + shift instead of cmd + shift and others to navigate around. That's particularly helpful if you're someone who regularly switches between a Windows PC and Mac. Office 2016 for Mac ships with five apps: Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, and OneNote. They all feel like they've finally caught up to the Windows equivalents, making this a significant release for Microsoft. Office 365 Home and Personal subscribers can download Office 2016 for Mac today, and a standalone version will be released in September. Hi Apple people. I just wanna know that if u have something idea about 'Office 2013' for mac. U know what i mean, the office 2013 that is not the subscription one. I dont wanna use the office 365 because its no sense at all. I want the whole software which i can use whenever i want until i want to uninstall i Are'nt the Microsoft will build a Office 2013 for mac? I hope they will make so. Or maybe i should just buy the Microsoft Office 2011 for mac instead incase of there will be no office 2013. I'm new to mac world, i havnt install any office software yet. I was looking at the office 2011 but i said there will be a 2013 version, but i get disappointed to know that there are no office 2013 for mac. JovAgoncUSA wrote: Hi Apple people. I just wanna know that if u have something idea about 'Office 2013' for mac. U know what i mean, the office 2013 that is not the subscription one. I dont wanna use the office 365 because its no sense at all. I want the whole software which i can use whenever i want until i want to uninstall i Are'nt the Microsoft will build a Office 2013 for mac? I hope they will make so. Or maybe i should just buy the Microsoft Office 2011 for mac instead incase of there will be no office 2013. I'm new to mac world, i havnt install any office software yet. I was looking at the office 2011 but i said there will be a 2013 version, but i get disappointed to know that there are no office 2013 for mac. П˜Ÿ While only Microsoft knows its plans for Office for Mac, it's clear that Microsoft is pushing users to a subscription base rather than, as you put it, 'software which i can use whenever i want until i want to uninstall i,' which happens to be what I prefer, too. Yesterday, I installed the free Office 2013 upgrade after having recently purchased (the 3 user pack) and installed Office 2010 on a Windows Virtual Machine. First, you get one 2013 license whether you bought the 1 or 3 user Office 2010 install, whereas the Office 365 upgrade choice (you could pick either with the Office 2010 purchase) gets you five installations, at least for one year. Second, I believe you can move those 365 installations around, while with the computer based install, you can't deactivate it on one machine and reuse the license on another, at least not without dealing directly with Microsoft. Third, the subscription system is supposed to get you any full upgrades (e.g., 2013 to 2015), while the disk based 2013 is it; you'll have to buy 2015 fresh, if there even is such a thing by then. So you can see the push is towards subscriptions by making them a much better deal, at least price-wise. On the other hand, I was surprised to find that the 2013 installation didn't delete the 2010 installation. And in comparing the two, the 2010 interface is more pleasant to work with, and if you don't need or trust the Cloud, the big new feature in 2013 is the ability to open and edit pdf files.
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