![]() If any of those three things make you sit up and think " Hmm, I reckon I should be upgrading to Microsoft Office 2013", then think again – if you're running Office 2010, you already have these features included. OneDrive integration! New views in Excel and PowerPoint! Facebook integration with Outlook! Why You Think You Need Microsoft Office 2013 What this essentially means is that by adding free downloads from Microsoft to Office 2010, you can save hundreds of dollars. ![]() Microsoft Office 2013 might have a new user interface and offer "new" features (see below) but all in all, it is just the same package as released previously, plus a few free add-ons. It soon became apparent that Microsoft seems to be playing a very interesting – and risky – game. While I mulled these questions, I had a bit of a play with Office 2013. Over the weeks it has been a reasonably solid experience with one or two quirks causing me no end of frustration.īut do I want to upgrade? Do I want to pay for a subscription or full purchase or would I prefer to stick with Microsoft Office 2010, a suite that I've been using successfully for several years now? Indeed, should I even think of abandoning Microsoft in favor of an open source alternative? I'm coming to the end of my trial period with Microsoft Office 2013.
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