The Final Look
For most of the history of this blog, I have been showing you screenshots produced using “Beta 1” builds of Excel 2007 and making comments along the lines of “not final UI”. Today, the UI became a lot more final. What do I mean? This morning at the CeBIT conference in Germany, Microsoft publicly showcased what will be the final visuals for the
Office 2007 user interface. Here is a screenshot of Excel.
(Click to enlarge)There is another “skin” available too.
(Click to enlarge)There are a number of changes from what you saw in the “Beta 1” build. Some are aesthetic – colours,
Cheap Office Home And Business 2010, fills – but there are plenty of others. For example, the “quick access toolbar” is in the title bar, group (nee “chunk”) titles are at the bottom, there is a big round “Office Button”, there is a new View tab that contains view and window management controls, etc. Jensen Harris’ UI blog has screenshots of other apps,
office Home and Student key, a description of what the Office Button is all about,
Windows 7 Ultimate Key, and other information, so please take a look. He will also be talking about the logic behind some of the designs over the coming weeks, so you might want to check back.For all you “Beta1” testers out there, the “Beta1 technical refresh”, which is where these shots come from, will soon be available. For folks that want to sign up for the public beta later this spring, please register here.One more point on all this – there may still be minor tweaks between now and when we ship – an icon changing, a button moving – but for the most part, the UI is close to final. I will be publishing a detailed look at each Excel tab around the timeframe of the public beta.More Rows and Columns
Since I have received ~10 emails from blog readers in the past 2 weeks asking if we were increasing the size of the Excel grid this release, I thought I would briefly circle back to where I started and say “yes, we have made the grid bigger … specifically, the Excel 12 grid will be 1,048,576 rows by 16,384 columns. That’s 1,
microsoft office professional,500% more rows and 6,300% more columns than in Excel 2003, and for those of you that are curious, columns now end at XFD instead of IV.” For information on this and lots of other limits we changed, please see this blog post.One other note to end this post – for readers that have not been following this blog since its inception, I have categorized all the posts (see the “Categories” box on the right-hand side of the page),
Microsoft Office Professional Plus, so you can go back and browse topics that look interesting. <div