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Microsoft Corp. CEO Steve Ballmer unveiled the customer preview of the new Microsoft Office suite tailored for tablets and other touch screen devices. It takes advantage of cloud computing and is designed for use with the upcoming Windows 8 operating system.
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The new Start experience gives you easy access to inspiration, with new, compelling templates and a list of your recently viewed documents so you can get back to where you were in no time.
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When presenting with a second screen (such as with a projector), new behind-the-scenes tools keep you in control and allow you to focus on and connect with your audience.
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Reformatting and rearranging your data made easy. Watch Excel learn and recognize your pattern and auto-complete the remaining data, with no formulas or macros required.
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Hold virtual conferences or ad-hoc conversations with interactive video through Lync.
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Multiple contacts are transparently joined into one view, reducing distracting duplicates and offering social context.
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Take a peek at your schedule, a specific appointment or details about the person you're emailing with, without moving screens or losing context.
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Get in touch with OneNote. Use your fingers and hands to move through your pages and notes when you don't have a keyboard.
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The radial menu in OneNote is optimized for touch and quick decisions on-the-go.
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With SharePoint, Office 365 delivers business-centric social networking designed to help people stay connected and innovate together.
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Without ever leaving the Outlook window, address recognition in the Bing app for Outlook helps you quickly find where you%u2019re going.
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Use content from PDFs easily and make it look great. Word now opens PDFs and makes content, such as paragraphs, lists and tables, act as familiar Word documents.
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Kirk Koenigsbauer, Vice President of Marketing for the Microsoft Office Division, demonstrates the new Office.