ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Kevin Kieller
KEVIN KIELLERPrincipal, enableUCKevin Kieller is a partner with enableUC, a company that helps measure, monitor and improve UC and collaboration...
Read Full Bio >>
SHARE



Kevin Kieller | June 29, 2011 |

 
   

Office 365: First Impressions

Office 365: First Impressions Office 365 certainly is not a complete cloud solution but I believe it provides good cloud-powered tools to extend the Microsoft Office suite into new areas.

Office 365 certainly is not a complete cloud solution but I believe it provides good cloud-powered tools to extend the Microsoft Office suite into new areas.

Microsoft officially launched Office 365 today and here is a first impression.

First a rapid summary of what is included in Office 365:

Office 365 includes email through hosted Exchange and the Outlook Web App (browser based access to email, calendar and contacts) or the full version of Outlook installed on your Windows desktop or Macintosh computer--although according to the online documentation only Outlook 2007 and Outlook 2010 are currently supported.

Office 365 also includes Microsoft Lync, which provides instant messaging, presence, audio calling, desktop video conferencing and web conferencing. Currently you can only call between other Lync users; that is, you cannot place calls to or receive calls from the PSTN (regular telephone numbers). This might change in the future. To use Lync, you must download and install the Lync application on your Windows computer. The on-premise version of Lync does support Macintosh users, however it is not clear that Office 365 does at this point.

Lync does allow users to connect with users at other organizations (federation) and does allow Office 365 Lync users to communicate with Windows Live users as well using IM, audio or video. I see this as a very powerful feature. (See my previous The Day the PSTN Died post for more related thoughts.) Office 365 does NOT support IM, audio or video with AOL or Yahoo! Users. And there is no mention of any integration with Google users!

Office 365 Lync can also, through a third party contract, be enabled to support dial-in conferencing. With this setup, Lync acts as your company’s conference bridge and users can join a conference from a standard telephone.

In terms of hosted Microsoft Office, Office 365 includes Web-based versions of Word, PowerPoint, Excel and OneNote. These are basic versions of the standard Microsoft Office applications; more details on this below.

Depending on the Office 365 package you subscribe to, you may also be licensed to use and install the full Microsoft Office applications. I have seen criticism of Microsoft because there are multiple subscription plans, but to be fair, I think Microsoft has provided options for organizations that already own Microsoft Office licenses, which you can then "connect" to Office 365 online.

And lastly, Office 365 also includes a version of Sharepoint that allows you to create team sites, web sites, project sites or many other types of sites--all of which can either be private or public.

In my opinion, the lifeblood that courses through most organizations' veins is email and documents.

Office 365 handles email very well, however with "...over 1 billion Microsoft Office users...", according to Steve Ballmer, there are many, many existing documents to be moved, shared, read, and updated.

So how does the hosted Office 365 Web Apps handle Office documents? I would say mediocre at best.

As a quick test, I uploaded and tried to edit my most recent Word, Excel and PowerPoint documents with mixed results:

Word--Document displayed fine online. I needed to convert document to edit it and when I was editing, the document was clearly not WYSIWYG, however once saved and reopened in the full version of Word, the formatting was perfectly preserved, including fonts, tables and page breaks.

Excel--Document displayed fine online however I was not able to edit it because a message said the documented contained a number of unsupported features. It did offer that I could save a copy and then open this copy for editing. I didn’t have time to bother trying this.

PowerPoint--Document displayed fine and I was able to edit the text of the slides. I was not able to edit any images (or even reposition an image). I was also not able to insert SmartArt or a picture or a table. I was able to read and edit slide notes.

For a quick comparison I then uploaded and tried to edit the same documents with Google Apps and had even less success:

Word--Document displayed close to correct. I was able to edit, however this process changed fonts, tables and page breaks. In fact for this specific document, after editing in Google Apps the tables were modified such that printing the document afterwards from Word caused many table columns to "spill off" the page.

Excel--I was able to edit the document but once again this process irrevocably altered the original and in fact caused some existing formulas to no longer be valid--it seems that some named ranges were not preserved in the process.

PowerPoint--I could view the document with some minor font issues and the included SmartArt graphics did not display. I could NOT edit the document.

*Note that the actual edit capabilities in both Office 365 and Google Apps depends on your operating system and browser version. I happened to be using a Windows Vista machine with Internet Explorer 9 for my tests.



COMMENTS




Currently we allow the following HTML tags in comments:

Single tags

These tags can be used alone and don't need an ending tag.

<br> Defines a single line break

<hr> Defines a horizontal line

Matching tags

These require an ending tag - e.g. <i>italic text</i>

<a> Defines an anchor

<b> Defines bold text

<big> Defines big text

<blockquote> Defines a long quotation

<caption> Defines a table caption

<cite> Defines a citation

<code> Defines computer code text

<em> Defines emphasized text

<fieldset> Defines a border around elements in a form

<h1> This is heading 1

<h2> This is heading 2

<h3> This is heading 3

<h4> This is heading 4

<h5> This is heading 5

<h6> This is heading 6

<i> Defines italic text

<p> Defines a paragraph

<pre> Defines preformatted text

<q> Defines a short quotation

<samp> Defines sample computer code text

<small> Defines small text

<span> Defines a section in a document

<s> Defines strikethrough text

<strike> Defines strikethrough text

<strong> Defines strong text

<sub> Defines subscripted text

<sup> Defines superscripted text

<u> Defines underlined text

Did you know you can style comments using HTML tags and upload your avatar photo? To upload your avatar photo, first complete your Disqus profile. Once your profile is complete, you may add your avatar photo. (Hide this hint)

Sign up to the No Jitter email newsletters

  • Catch up with the blogs, features and columns from No Jitter, the online community for the IP communications industry. Each Thursday, we'll send you a synopsis of the high-impact articles, podcasts and other material posted to No Jitter that week, with links for quick access.

  • A quick hit of original analysis by the experts who bring you Enterprise Connect, the leading event in Enterprise Communications & Collaboration. Each Wednesday, this enewsletter delivers to your email box a thought-provoking, objective take on the latest news and trends in the industry.

Your email address is required for membership. For details about the user information, please read the UBM Privacy Statement

As an added benefit, would you like to receive relevant 3rd party offers about new products/services and discounted offers via email? Yes

* = Required Field
Enterprise Connect Orlando 2012
Enterprise Connect is proud to announce the following industry leaders will deliver keynote addresses at Enterprise Connect Orlando:
--Brett Shockley, SVP and GM, Avaya Applications and Emerging Technologies
--OJ Winge, Senior VP/GM,Video & Collaboration, Cisco
--Kirk Koenigsbauer, Corporate VP, Office Business Group, Microsoft
--Chris Hummel, President, North America and Global Chief Marketing Officer, Siemens Enterprise Communications
--Alistair Rennie, GM, Lotus Software and Collaboration Solutions, IBM Software Group
Enterprise Connect Webinars
Wednesday, Nov. 30, 2 PM EST/11 AM PST

This presentation reviews best practices and tools for implementing data center clouds, including how to pin-point and resolve problems, and minimize cost while maximizing performance and usability.
Virtual Enterprise Connect
This in-depth Virtual Event will feature detailed presentations by technology experts who can help you plan your Lync-based UC migration and get the most out of all that Lync has to offer..
Enterprise Connect Orlando 2012
The Enterprise Connect conference program has been published! Our confernce is designed with one over-riding objective: To help you make the best decisions as you migrate your enterprise communications and collaboration.
Trending Now
Upcoming Events
March 1, 2012
As the benefits of social business become clear and the case for social business grows more compelling, enterprises are looking for approaches that allow them to cost-effectively roll out these system...
February 15, 2012
For employees away from the office - whether on the go, at a remote location, or telecommuting from home - success depends on connecting the right people with the right information anywhere to acceler...
February 1, 2012
Have your video implementation projects fallen short of your expectations in user satisfaction or utilization? Reaping the benefits depends on not only on selecting the technology, but on careful plan...