Office 2013 Now Available to Businesses

Broad availability is expected on January 29, 2013

Microsoft announced today that its business customers can now purchase the Office 2013 suites, applications, and servers through its volume licensing program. This includes Office 2013, Exchange Server 2013, Lync Server 2013, SharePoint Server 2013, Project 2013 and Visio 2013.

Microsoft says that retail and online availability of Office 2013 is expected in the first quarter of 2013. My sources tell met this will happen in the final days of January 2013.

“The new Office gives customers a comprehensive set of productivity tools to help them do their best work in a world of devices and services,” Sanjay Manchanda notes in a post to the Office News blog. “From the free trial of the new Office we delivered through the Customer Preview in July to our announcement in October that we had reached our RTM milestone, we've gotten a lot of valuable feedback that helped shape the final version.”

Manchanda notes the following highlights of Office 2013:

  • The new Office works beautifully with touch, stylus, mouse or keyboard to give you the ultimate productivity experience. It brings the familiar Office experience to a wide range of new devices and gives you the best experience on Windows.
  • The new Office is inherently social with real-time news feeds for people, documents and discussions, high-definition video conferencing, shared notebooks and virtual whiteboards.
  • The new Office provides security features without compromise, includes data loss prevention, compliance management, built-in malware protection, and flexible deployment options across on-premises and in the cloud.
  • The new Office is in the cloud. Coupled with new cloud services available next year, the new Office will save your documents to SkyDrive by default, and your personalized settings, templates and documents will travel with you.

Anyone can test-drive the new Office today via the beta versions of the Office 365 service.

Discuss this Article 7

John Thurlow
on Dec 3, 2012

No word yet on whether you can upgrade from the current Office 365 for Small Business that does not include Office desktop applications to the new Office 365 that includes them?

DaveLessnau
on Dec 3, 2012

I've been test driving Office 2013/365 on Windows 8 for about a month now. I was planning upgrading from Office 2010 when the new version was released. But, after working with it for a while, I probably won't upgrade. As you mentioned in your articles, the pricing is right and so is the licensing stuff. But, besides the interface changes, I don't see what the new version gets me. Plus, I'm not really happy with those interface changes. Specifically, the lack of colors (everything is white). I can't see what's going on. And, several times now, I've closed a background window while I was trying to close a foreground one because the lack of color make it tough to differentiate between the two.

A shame, really.

cmwilkerson
on Dec 5, 2012

I agree on Color. Also can't import a Calendar! Also Calendar birthdate placed in 2012 starts in 2013! (bug). Other bugs include the 365 Program suggesting to me on log in, that I am using IE 7 when in fact I am using IE 10 with Windows 8 Pro!

LemonSaucy
on Dec 3, 2012

I tried it but switch back to Office 2010. I can't stand the anemic flat all - colour - bleached - out look of Office 2013. I hope I'm not being offensive, but that's my honest reaction.

So .. where is Microsoft getting it's style advice from these days? The School of Albino Minimalism?

DaveLessnau
on Dec 4, 2012

I think Microsoft has gone to this concept of minimalism is for two reasons. First, they're trying to make the interface easier to handle on touch screens. Second, they're probably trying increase battery life on mobile devices by reducing rendering requirements. Personally, I think they've gone too far. They've "simplified" things by taking informative elements (like color) out of the environment. I mentioned that I've closed background windows because I couldn't tell the difference between background and foreground. In Outlook, I also had problems because the only visual cue to a new message sitting in a folder is a pallid number sitting next to the folder name. They removed visual informative cues because some PhD decided it was clutter.

kevm14
on Dec 4, 2012

I want Outlook 2013 for one simple reason: FINALLY EAS support for Hotmail. I'm sure the rest of Office 2013 is good though I've been perfectly happy with 2010.

runway12
on Dec 6, 2012

I have been using it for a while now via Technet and besides the cloud integration and the start-up screen for each Office Application it still closely resembles 2010. Who is really going to utilize this product though are office 365 users or those tied to some other form of MS software subscription

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