Showing posts with label Business. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Business. Show all posts

Sunday, November 3, 2013

Billy’s Yammer Moment: Influencing the business in unexpected ways

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

Billy Saqr is an account executive at LexisNexis, a leading global provider of legal, regulatory, and news and business information and analysis to legal, corporate, government, and academic customers. As a remote employee, Billy works from home but frequently visits his law school clients, educating them on the product and showcasing enhanced features to streamline their research. Over time, he started to receive feedback from power users on ways to improve the product--simple changes that could greatly improve students’ workflow. Yammer gave Billy a platform to share this feedback with teams and executives he’d normally never interact with (especially from his home office). In one instance, Billy discovered a thread discussing designs for the new product, and he felt empowered to chime in with comments he’d gathered from customers. Later, upon seeing the released product, he saw the design team had taken some of his feedback into account. Working in the open on Yammer gave Billy a voice to contribute to the business in unpredictable ways. Watch the video below to hear his story.

Visit the Moments site to learn more about the ways customers like Billy are making an impact at work. Have a Yammer moment of your own? Tweet with the hashtag #yammermoments today!


View the original article here

Friday, November 1, 2013

Six alternative tools for small business collaboration

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

For small businesses today, there’s nothing that can’t be done in the cloud. You could plunk down your cash for Basecamp, Yammer, and Google Docs like everyone else, but alternatives to these stalwarts abound. For something that does more, costs less—or both—check out these six Web-based tools, categorized based on their primary functionality.

Podio may still fly under the radar of such behemoths as Basecamp, but it’s rapidly emerging as the go-to collaboration tool for a new generation of knowledge workers. Originally a Danish startup, Citrix acquired it last year, and the new features keep on coming.

Podio’s marketplace of specialized apps lets you customize workspaces to your business’s needs.

Designed (like most collaboration systems) to eliminate excessive emailing, the structure is relatively simple: You invite employees into Podio’s internal communication network, then create any number of “workspaces” in which they can collaborate. You can admit outsiders on a workspace-by-workspace basis, keeping them out of the broader employee network.

The centerpiece of Podio actually isn’t its basic collaboration and project management system, but rather its innovative use of apps. Podio’s built-in marketplace includes thousands of highly specialized apps for just about every type of management need: property management, managing an art studio, even structuring the due diligence process when acquiring a company. A couple of clicks, and you can transform Podio from a general project-management tool into a highly focused one.

Mobile apps for iPhone and Android.

Pricing: Free for up to 5 users, then $9 per user per month.

For those of us in the service or consulting industry, simply managing active projects is only part of the puzzle. Keeping track of various clients, tracking your hours, collecting subcontractor timesheets, and managing retainers and invoicing all take up loads of time probably better spent doing other things.

AffinityLive builds a central database from which you can easily track your client activity. 

To get you started, AffinityLive gathers your email, address books, and calendar (from Google, Office 365, or Exchange) and builds a central database of all your clients. From here you can manage the way you interact with them. Each client gets its own activity stream, and incoming messages are automatically imported into the tool. As contacts progress from prospects to active clients, they’re updated and tracked in the system.

The free version doesn’t do much. It’s basically just a glorified contact database system. You’ll need to pony up $29 per user, per month to incorporate your calendar, do workflow management (including timesheet reports), and access CRM activities like preparing and sending quotes. Higher-end features like managing service contracts, tracking retainer usage, and dealing with recurring or auto-renewing invoices are available in a version costing $59 per user, per month.

No mobile apps (but site is mobile-friendly).

Pricing: Free to $59 per user per month, depending on features desired.

Wiki-building services have a reputation for being complex, messy, and driven more by code jockeys than end users. With many services, initial configuration can be tedious to the point where the idea of starting a wiki is abandoned altogether, let alone creating and managing the database itself.

HackPad’s clean, intuitive interface streamlines the process of creating wikis.

None of that is true with Hackpad. This dead-simple wiki manager can be mastered in a matter of minutes. Creating your wiki takes just a few steps (you get your own keyword.hackpad.com domain name). You can invite collaborators or leave it open to the public to edit. Click the (+) button to create a new document. Multiple users can edit in real time, and a sidebar on the left indicates who wrote what. It’s all very intuitive, simple, and well organized. If you want to get fancy, you can use it to create checklists, drop in videos or pictures, or write code in a communal development environment.

Public sites created with Hackpad are free. Private wikis are free for 30 days or up to five users (whichever happens last). After that you pay a measly $2 per user per month—which also gets you access to premium support. If wikis are in your wheelhouse, it’s an amazing value.

No mobile apps.

Pricing: Free for up to five users, then $2 per user per month.

For talking to your mom, Skype is fine, as is the occasional overseas call on your laptop or mobile device. But serious videoconferencing or telepresence is another thing altogether. If you have two offices on opposite sides of the country—or the globe—keeping the team working together can be a big challenge. This impacts many more small businesses than you’d think: Companies that rely on pockets of operating groups located all over the place are becoming increasingly common.

Mezzanine lets videoconferencing participants use their own devices to share content, apps, and ideas across multiple screens.

Oblong is the company that’s bringing videoconferencing into the ’10s. Imagine a bank of large-screen monitors in your conference room connected via the Internet to a similar bank at your satellite office. Full-screen video is beamed in both directions, and both sides can work on a shared whiteboard, present their own content, or share apps. All of this is controlled via the participants’s mobile devices, a Web browser, or a spatially-aware “magic” wand that’s a bit like a Nintendo Wii controller. Oblong is now working on a version of its system that works with nothing but hand gestures, but that still seems to be a few years off.

It’s pretty cool stuff, and that’s not surprising: The developer consulted on the seminal film Minority Report. To be sure, this kind of technology doesn’t come cheap (pricing isn’t disclosed, but it’ll definitely cost more than a webcam). Still, while Mezzanine may not be in reach of every small business, those with serious distances to cross might find it worth at least getting a demo. For the rest of us, it’s a tantalizing glimpse into what the future of collaboration is probably going to look like.

Mobile apps for iPhone and Android.

Pricing: Not disclosed.

Social networking is popular enough that savvy businesses are considering a Facebook-like system for their employees. But it needs to be private. After all, you can’t have them updating their resumes on LinkedIn all day when they should be doing their jobs.

Bitrix24 should feel natural for users of popular social media platforms.

Yammer has long been the standard for private social networks, but Bitrix24 is also worth a spin. It’s got some extra features and may be less expensive, depending on how large your company is.

For starters, Bitrix24.looks a lot like your standard social network, offering each user a news feed/activity stream, private conversations (you’re supposed to talk about work), messaging, and photo galleries. There’s even a “like” button, which Bitrix24 uses to influence the way search results are organized. As a lighthearted motivation tool, you can set up badges that managers can hand out to workers in exchange for a job well done.

PacBitrix24, based in Eastern Europe, also has integrated project management features, so you can forgo a separate tool if you use it for workflow and to-do lists. All of this is included in the system for a flat monthly fee. Unlike most cloud-based services, Bitrix24 is all-you-can-eat for most installations: $99 per month for the Standard plan, or $199 for the Professional plan, which adds a records management and a scheduling system, among other tools.

Mobile apps for iPhone and Android.

Pricing: Free up to 12 users/5GB, then $99 to $199 a month.

There’s no shortage of cloud-based productivity apps, from the venerable Google Docs to HyperOffice to Zoho. Surprisingly, the most capable of the bunch might now be Microsoft Office 365, the Web-based version of the industry-standard Office software.

Office 365 brings all the functionality of Microsoft Office to the cloud, making it a more business-ready alternative to Google Docs.

Office 365 works in tandem with the offline version of its software, but it’s also fully capable in its browser-only incarnation. If you know how to use Office, you know how to use Office 365. As with buying Office for offline use, how much you pay is determined by how sophisticated your business needs are. The bare minimum, at $5 per month per user, gets you Web-only access to the system. Bumping up to $12.50 per month per user gets you desktop versions of most apps, plus Office Mobile for your smartphones, for a maximum of 25 users. At $15 per month you get Microsoft InfoPath added to the mix, plus support for businesses up to 300 employees in size.

Designed with multiple users in mind, users can work on a document simultaneously, and the included email handling tools bring Exchange-class administration to small businesses that wouldn’t normally be able to afford a mail server. Sure, it’s hard to describe anything from Microsoft as “alternative,” but it’s easily worth a look in an increasingly Google-run world.

Mobile apps for iPhone and Android.

Pricing: $5 to $15 per user per month.

HackPad Simple-to-use real-time wiki Hackpad has innovative features and a free plan.

Download Now

View the original article here

Saturday, July 13, 2013

Julie Larson-Green at the Wired Business Conference

I just do not get why people complain so much about the start screen and design.

A., if you're a power user as most of you claim to be, you were already using the windows key (and other hot-key combinations) to open up your start screen and navigate in Windows anyways. Now, instead of it being a 4-6 inch pop up it's your whole monitor.. Oh, miss the "ALL Programs"  menu?? Right-click and then click all apps or swipe up from the bottom (touch the bottom and drag up quickly if you're not so technically savvy). Same scenario just optimized for the touch monitor. As a designer, this makes complete sense because if you can get the program to work for touch touch you don't need to design for a mouse it will integrate easily. Sometimes, I wish I could use touch instead of my mouse..

B., if you don't like developing on windows 8 RT, develop a desktop app with C#/XAML, C++/XAML OR, OR, the age old JavaScript/HTML. There are several areas in the .NET framework to develop in. If you understand OOP and data driven programming, which I am certain you do because you've developed before; you will find that the markup and OOP principles are still there.. You just have to try something different. I know, I know, change is scary. But I can assure you that programming in a new language, a new format or style will not kill you..

C., Don't like the design? Perhaps, you should take a few design courses, then, design AND develop an experience and not just a logical program; find out how truly difficult it is to cater to 900 dimensions to please everyone and I am certain your opinion will change about the ugly and "godwful" design of Windows 8. (hold on, did you say "godwful"? Are you 5? No one is on a power trip) Anyway, it's not just about the design, stop thinking so singularly. Add design, development, ease of use, simple guidelines and user pleasure and guess what, you no longer have a logical program you have a fully fleshed out, living, evolving experience. Which is the future of technology. I think Steve Jobs, said, there will be a time when users don't need hard drives. He was right. Think about all of the devices you use, tabs, phones, comps, laptops.. I am tired of them not working together.. Having 100's of passwords and saving in multiple places.. In 2005, I tired having my cable tv, internet, telephone all working through my computer.. Unfortunately, it was too soon for that at the time. But not now. Now, my xBox, laptop, desktop and even my servers are all connected.. I even run a domain controller on Azure and connect my local environment to the DC in azure. Do you know the possibilities of this for Small Business, aka, the backbone of our economy..?

About MAC's, let's be honest, go to your awesome MAC change the desktop background and then go to your tablet and tell me if the same is image is displaying.. (using only stock apps) I doubt it, because they are not actively designing with the notion of simplicity ACROSS devices in mind they are designing with sexy SIMPLE devices in mind. Think about that for a second.

Lastly, it's not that they aren't answering your complaints, it's that they are not complaints they are opinions and it appears every bad opinion is the about windows 8. Though I am certain Microsoft values your opinion; every time I read these things it's the same issues over and over, I want the start screen, bring back DOS, where is this and where is that.. Here is something I bet you've never heard. LEARN SOMETHING NEW. Try it before complaining and really try it, don't half-ass it and bring some improvements to the table, instead of bitchy complaints, and I bet you'll feel more appreciated.


View the original article here

Simpler email aliases for Office 365 Small Business

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

Katie Kivett is a program manager in the Microsoft Office Division, focused on the Office 365 small business customer experience and administration.

Using email aliases is a simple way to have messages sent to different email addresses, but into the same inbox. Today we're excited to announce we've listened to your feedback and made email aliases even easier to create, edit, and delete and streamlined all of these tasks in the Small Business admin portal.   

So, why would you want to use an email alias? As an example, you have an employee who is a jack-of-all-trades performing multiple roles, such as sales and support. This would be the perfect time to create two aliases: sales@contoso.com and support@contoso.com. With these two aliases, the employee can receive mail to both addresses right in his or her inbox, while maintaining a very professional-looking, public email address.

Sometimes, aliases can serve as the perfect "throwaway" email addresses when signing up with accounts that might send spam (e.g., promotional mailers, newsletters, etc.). You can use rules to manage unwanted messages from a "throwaway" alias or delete the alias altogether. In the end, you will know your primary email address is not compromised.

It's pretty easy to create an alias for users in Office 365 for Small Businesses. Check out this video for a quick overview.

Read more about how to assign email aliases. Please let us know what you think in the comment section below. 

FAQs:

Q: Does creating an alias use up one of the user licenses that come with my Office 365 Small Business subscription?

A: No, creating an email alias does not require an additional license since the alias must be attached to an existing licensed user in order for the email to go to the user's inbox.

Q: I have Office 365 Midsize Business or Office 365 Enterprise (or equivalent), how do I manage aliases?

A: You can manage email aliases in the Exchange admin center (EAC), see this help topic for additional information.

Q: How many aliases can I assign to a user?

A: We do not currently impose a limit; however, it would be difficult for a user to keep track of too many email aliases.

Q: How can I use aliases and have multiple users to be able to see the same inbox?

A: When you need multiple users to view and manage the same inbox, you should use a Shared Mailbox or a Site Mailbox.

Q: How do I change the send-from alias so that the send-from email address appears as alias@yourcompany.com?

A: Aliases work for incoming mail only. If you need a send from address to appear for the message recipient you need to use a Shared Mailbox.

-- Katie Kivett


View the original article here

Monday, April 8, 2013

Webinar: Learn about Office 365 Small Business Premium

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

Last week, we introduced the new Office for businesses. In this webinar, we'll dive into Office 365 Small Business Premium and show you how 1-10 employees can get best-in-class tools and services. We'll also look at new features and a comparison chart for businesses of all sizes.

Can't view this video? It's also available at Microsoft Showcase. Need a peek? Here's a 30-second trailer.

What you will learn at Tuesday's webinar:

What is an Office subscription? Comparing plans for different size businesses New features in Word 2013 and other programs Why a business-class email program rocks

References for this webinar:

Go to http://aka.ms/offweb for more information on how to join the series live every Tuesday.

--Doug Thomas


View the original article here

Saturday, April 6, 2013

Getting started with business intelligence in the new Office

Reliable business intelligence and insight are the keys to a thriving business. Excel, SharePoint, and Office 365 make in an organization as part of the daily work more for everyone business intelligence (BI) in the new Office.  New and improved features in familiar tools like Excel enable all in one company to easily discover, model, analyze, and visualize data from different sources. With SharePoint all experience levels can jointly develop and share insights on dashboards and scorecards, and this experience continues seamlessly in the cloud with Office 365. For enterprise environments, these functions are further enhanced by SQL Server for higher performance and scalability both locally and in the cloud with BI-azure. Ultimately, everyone in the organization using Microsoft BI, can develop insights that help to make the new discoveries and better and more informed decisions.

Gemini was a popular add-in for Excel 2010, enables hundreds of millions of rows in Excel to create the large data models. In Excel, this feature will reduce the effort for the downloads and installation now natively embedded. PowerPivot is supported in SharePoint with SQL Server Analysis Services where the PowerPivot workbooks largely can be released models in the entire organization. New features such as quick explore help users navigate their data and analysis fast offers preview of your diagrams, charts and scorecards.

Users can:

Combining and analyzing large data sets with PowerPivotSummarize data and discover trends with quick ExploreInstantly preview charts and pivot tables with fast analysis

Introducing SQL Server 2012, power view provides a canvas to create Visual dashboards in SharePoint. Now this function in Excel and SharePoint is embedded, so that business users can create stunning reports to share and interact throughout the organization. The field list to the Pan and change the views now supports Excel Services in the browser. We have also extended PerformancePoint services provide additional features such as themes, filter extensions, authentication improvements, new BI Portal and server-side migration.

Users can:

Do browse interactive data with power ViewShare reports with your colleagues with Excel ServicesWork together, make decisions on dashboards with PerformancePoint services from

Self-service BI has often triggered maintain the integrity of the reports and security concerns for it professionals. With the new request tool in Excel and audit and service control manager in SharePoint IT governance teams can manage created more self service BI end user assets. Together, will compare these features help in various versions of the reports and track changes in report libraries to a version of the truth, to ensure your insights.

Users can:

Consolidation and simplification of management with SharePointDiagnose workbooks for errors and track changes by using spreadsheet InquireManage spreadsheet risk within an organization with audit and service control manager

An opportunity that started with Microsoft BI is through our new Microsoft BI solution Builder online-tool, that helps to configure the correct platform for your organization.

Try it out today at: http://www.bisolutionbuilder.com/

Find more resources on the Microsoft BI on the Microsoft Business Intelligence Blog.

BI features supported by Office 365?

With the new updates to Office 365, we support now features such as quick explore, Gemini and power view in SharePoint online for BI scenarios. There are however a few limitations when compared to the in-place environment:

Workbook maximum group size 10MBNo external data RefreshNo PerformancePoint ServicesNo PowerPivot Gallery

Offer information on the full Microsoft cloud BI in the future we will announce.

Are Excel workbooks backwards compatible?

The data model-enabled workbooks in Excel 2013 are not backward-compatible with earlier versions of Excel. Excel 2010 workbooks prompts however the automatic update on Excel 2013 data models when opened in Excel 2013 client for forward compatibility with Gemini models. Excel 2010 workbooks that are stored in SharePoint in which must be Excel-2013 client open and upgrade to the newer model of data in Excel Services in SharePoint 2013 used.

Are BI features in Office home and student RT supported?

On the client side the embedded Excel in Office home and student-RT includes in the delivery of Windows RT, not the most BI features, providing the full Excel 2013 Professional plus client. In particular, PowerPivot, power view is quickly explore and request not available in Office home and student of RT.

On the SharePoint page, most of the functions in the mobile browsers of today's tablets, except the Web parts support the Silverlight as well as PowerPivot Gallery, power views in Excel Services, and decomposition, will require trees in PerformancePoint services.


View the original article here

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Which Windows 8 version is right for your small business?

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

Regardless of whether your business is Fortune 500 big or mom-and-pop small, transitioning to a new operating system is a major endeavor—and a major headache. There's a reason why so many companies still use Windows XP, after all. So when you do bite the bullet, you want to make sure you're picking an operating system that meets all your needs.

But wait! The decision-making process isn't done once you've decided to transition your company to Microsoft's latest operating system. Like previous versions of Windows, Windows 8 comes in several editions. There’s the basic, straightforward Windows 8—similar to the Home edition in previous versions of Windows—as well as costlier Windows 8 Pro and Windows 8 Enterprise versions, both of which offer additional business-friendly features.

Which is right for your business? It all depends on your company's particular needs. Let's break down what each version of Windows 8 brings to the table.

The differences between the various Windows 8 editions go beyond their retail packaging.

Most small businesses will be fine running the standard version of Windows 8, which we covered in-depth in our official Windows 8 review. While the flashy visual overhaul may have given the OS a whole new look and feel, Windows 8's desktop mode is basically Windows 7 sans a Start button—along with several under-the-hood tweaks that improve the operating system's overall speed and responsiveness.

That's not to say the stock version of the OS skimps on new features. Windows 8 raises the bar on the security front, offering a multitude of core improvements, while the addition of file histories, improved multi-monitor support, native ISO and VHD mounting, amalgamated Storage Spaces, and a streamlined Task Manager make it easier to get things done on a day-to-day basis. From a direct productivity perspective, Windows 8 boots up, shuts down, and wakes from sleep faster than greased lightning, especially if your business has invested in solid-state drives.

Before you dive into any version of Windows 8, however, consider the potential training and support costs you might incur by adopting Microsoft's new-look operating system. The modern UI-style Start Screen is a radical shift from the traditional Windows desktop (which is just a live-tile click away), and usability experts say that  Windows 8's flat design and hidden controls are unintuitive for average users. We found the learning curve moderate at best, but you will need to invest some resources in educating your employees about Windows 8. If touchscreen support isn't a major concern, think hard about whether Windows 7 or Windows 8 would be a better fit for your business.

Windows 8 Pro costs more than Windows 8, but you receive some nifty new features in return. The ability to install the optional Windows 8 Media Center Pack for $10 probably won't appeal in a business setting, but other Windows 8 Pro additions are firmly business-friendly, albeit highly specific in nature. Here are the highlights:

Group policies: If you need 'em, you need Windows 8 Pro or Enterprise.

Domains and group policy. Does your business use a centrally administered network with a Windows Server domain and group policy? These features allow an organization to centrally manage a network, including user profiles and computer settings, from a single server. Many businesses rely on domains and group policies, and only computers running Windows 8 Pro or Enterprise can use them.

BitLocker and EFS. BitLocker makes a return in Windows 8. It’s a full-disk encryption solution that can encrypt entire hard drives, including your Windows system drive or even USB drives (with BitLocker To Go). Once you've encrypted a drive with BitLocker, anyone who powers on the computer or connects the USB drive will need to enter the encryption key, or the drive will remain locked and inaccessible—a useful feature if you’re dealing with sensitive customer information. Windows 8 Pro also packs support for Microsoft's encrypted file system (EFS) technology. Businesses that need Windows 8 Pro only for its encryption features can try using TrueCrypt, instead. It's a free, open-source encryption solution that works with all desktop versions of Windows.

The Windows 8 version of Hyper-V lacks the native Windows XP virtualization support found in Windows 7's version. Now you need a license key to run a Windows XP virtual machine.

Hyper-V. Hyper-V is an integrated virtualization solution that has made its way from Windows Server to Windows 8, although it's missing some of the Server edition's more exotic options. Basically, it's useful for running multiple virtualized servers on a single Windows system or for installing other guest operating systems within Windows 8 for software testing. If you’re not sure whether you need Hyper-V, you probably don’t.

Even if you need virtualization support, however, you don't necessarily need Hyper-V and Windows 8 Pro. VirtualBox, a free piece of virtual machine software, works on any Windows system. (You can also use VirtualBox to try Windows 8 for free.) VMware Workstation is another popular workplace virtualization product, although it isn’t free.

Remote Desktop hosting. While any Windows 8 PC can use Microsoft's Remote Desktop app to connect to a host computer, only Windows 8 Pro and Enterprise installations can be configured as a host PC and accessed from afar.

Most small or medium-size businesses won't need the advanced features found in Windows 8 Enterprise, which sports super-specialized tools that are more useful in large enterprise environments—hence the name. In fact, while Microsoft is happy to sell anyone copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8 Pro, you’ll need to have at least five PCs in your business and you'll need to participate in Microsoft’s Volume Licensing program to receive access to Windows 8 Enterprise.

We've covered the biggest benefits of Windows 8 Enterprise in a separate post. One of the brightest highlights is Windows To Go, which allows employees to boot into a full, manageable, and BitLocker-encryptable version of Windows 8 Enterprise off of a USB thumb drive. It's a great solution to the conundrums posed by the BYOD trend, but most small businesses can likely get by without it.

Software limitations neuter the business potential of Windows RT tablets like the Surface RT.

Windows RT can't be purchased directly; it's only found preinstalled on ARM processor-powered Windows RT tablets such as the Microsoft Surface RT. Windows RT largely mimics Windows 8, but unlike its PC-focused counterparts, Windows RT cannot run traditional desktop programs. Instead, it can run only the Modern-UI-style Windows 8 apps found in the Windows Store, and while the Windows Store's app selection is improving, it's still generally lacking in both quantity and quality.

The inclusion of the Office Home and Student RT suite is a major boon for Windows RT tablets, but licensing technicalities stamp out its legal use in the workplace.

"As sold, Office Home & Student 2013 RT Preview and the final edition are not designed for commercial, nonprofit, or revenue-generating activities," explains the Office Home & Student RT FAQ page. "However, organizations who purchase commercial use rights or have a commercial license to Office 2013 suites can use Office Home & Student 2013 RT for commercial, nonprofit, or revenue-generating activities."

Major bummer. Be sure to keep those considerations in mind when you're choosing between Windows RT and Windows 8 tablets for your company. With full-fledged Windows 8 tablets like the Acer W510 and Dell Latitude 10 starting to show up for $500—roughly the same price as a Windows RT tablet—it's hard to recommend picking up a Windows RT tablet for your business.

Wikipedia/Wikimedia FoundationThe available upgrade paths from Windows 7 to Windows 8.

While you're deciding which version of Windows 8 is right for your SMB, keep in mind that your current Windows 7 installation may constrain your Windows 8 upgrade path. The chart above comes from the surprisingly comprehensive Wikipedia entry on the various Windows 8 editions, which also includes a massive spreadsheet that visually details which features are available in which editions of the operating system. While it’s a bit light on information about the specific utilities, it's a very handy resource for comparing the feature sets of Windows RT and the various Windows 8 editions at a glance.

Brad Chacos

Brad Chacos spends the days jamming to Spotify, digging through desktop PCs and covering everything from BYOD tablets to DIY tesla coils.
More by Brad Chacos

Chris Hoffman

Chris Hoffman is a tech geek who's been writing about everything technology-related for years. When he's not writing about gadgets and software, he's probably using them in his spare time.
More by Chris Hoffman


View the original article here

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Which Windows 8 version is right for your small business?

AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

Regardless of whether your business is Fortune 500 big or mom-and-pop small, transitioning to a new operating system is a major endeavor—and a major headache. There's a reason why so many companies still use Windows XP, after all. So when you do bite the bullet, you want to make sure you're picking an operating system that meets all your needs.

But wait! The decision-making process isn't done once you've decided to transition your company to Microsoft's latest operating system. Like previous versions of Windows, Windows 8 comes in several editions. There’s the basic, straightforward Windows 8—similar to the Home edition in previous versions of Windows—as well as costlier Windows 8 Pro and Windows 8 Enterprise versions, both of which offer additional business-friendly features.

Which is right for your business? It all depends on your company's particular needs. Let's break down what each version of Windows 8 brings to the table.

The differences between the various Windows 8 editions go beyond their retail packaging.

Most small businesses will be fine running the standard version of Windows 8, which we covered in-depth in our official Windows 8 review. While the flashy visual overhaul may have given the OS a whole new look and feel, Windows 8's desktop mode is basically Windows 7 sans a Start button—along with several under-the-hood tweaks that improve the operating system's overall speed and responsiveness.

That's not to say the stock version of the OS skimps on new features. Windows 8 raises the bar on the security front, offering a multitude of core improvements, while the addition of file histories, improved multi-monitor support, native ISO and VHD mounting, amalgamated Storage Spaces, and a streamlined Task Manager make it easier to get things done on a day-to-day basis. From a direct productivity perspective, Windows 8 boots up, shuts down, and wakes from sleep faster than greased lightning, especially if your business has invested in solid-state drives.

Before you dive into any version of Windows 8, however, consider the potential training and support costs you might incur by adopting Microsoft's new-look operating system. The modern UI-style Start Screen is a radical shift from the traditional Windows desktop (which is just a live-tile click away), and usability experts say that  Windows 8's flat design and hidden controls are unintuitive for average users. We found the learning curve moderate at best, but you will need to invest some resources in educating your employees about Windows 8. If touchscreen support isn't a major concern, think hard about whether Windows 7 or Windows 8 would be a better fit for your business.

Windows 8 Pro costs more than Windows 8, but you receive some nifty new features in return. The ability to install the optional Windows 8 Media Center Pack for $10 probably won't appeal in a business setting, but other Windows 8 Pro additions are firmly business-friendly, albeit highly specific in nature. Here are the highlights:

Group policies: If you need 'em, you need Windows 8 Pro or Enterprise.

Domains and group policy. Does your business use a centrally administered network with a Windows Server domain and group policy? These features allow an organization to centrally manage a network, including user profiles and computer settings, from a single server. Many businesses rely on domains and group policies, and only computers running Windows 8 Pro or Enterprise can use them.

BitLocker and EFS. BitLocker makes a return in Windows 8. It’s a full-disk encryption solution that can encrypt entire hard drives, including your Windows system drive or even USB drives (with BitLocker To Go). Once you've encrypted a drive with BitLocker, anyone who powers on the computer or connects the USB drive will need to enter the encryption key, or the drive will remain locked and inaccessible—a useful feature if you’re dealing with sensitive customer information. Windows 8 Pro also packs support for Microsoft's encrypted file system (EFS) technology. Businesses that need Windows 8 Pro only for its encryption features can try using TrueCrypt, instead. It's a free, open-source encryption solution that works with all desktop versions of Windows.

The Windows 8 version of Hyper-V lacks the native Windows XP virtualization support found in Windows 7's version. Now you need a license key to run a Windows XP virtual machine.

Hyper-V. Hyper-V is an integrated virtualization solution that has made its way from Windows Server to Windows 8, although it's missing some of the Server edition's more exotic options. Basically, it's useful for running multiple virtualized servers on a single Windows system or for installing other guest operating systems within Windows 8 for software testing. If you’re not sure whether you need Hyper-V, you probably don’t.

Even if you need virtualization support, however, you don't necessarily need Hyper-V and Windows 8 Pro. VirtualBox, a free piece of virtual machine software, works on any Windows system. (You can also use VirtualBox to try Windows 8 for free.) VMware Workstation is another popular workplace virtualization product, although it isn’t free.

Remote Desktop hosting. While any Windows 8 PC can use Microsoft's Remote Desktop app to connect to a host computer, only Windows 8 Pro and Enterprise installations can be configured as a host PC and accessed from afar.

Most small or medium-size businesses won't need the advanced features found in Windows 8 Enterprise, which sports super-specialized tools that are more useful in large enterprise environments—hence the name. In fact, while Microsoft is happy to sell anyone copies of Windows 8 and Windows 8 Pro, you’ll need to have at least five PCs in your business and you'll need to participate in Microsoft’s Volume Licensing program to receive access to Windows 8 Enterprise.

We've covered the biggest benefits of Windows 8 Enterprise in a separate post. One of the brightest highlights is Windows To Go, which allows employees to boot into a full, manageable, and BitLocker-encryptable version of Windows 8 Enterprise off of a USB thumb drive. It's a great solution to the conundrums posed by the BYOD trend, but most small businesses can likely get by without it.

Software limitations neuter the business potential of Windows RT tablets like the Surface RT.

Windows RT can't be purchased directly; it's only found preinstalled on ARM processor-powered Windows RT tablets such as the Microsoft Surface RT. Windows RT largely mimics Windows 8, but unlike its PC-focused counterparts, Windows RT cannot run traditional desktop programs. Instead, it can run only the Modern-UI-style Windows 8 apps found in the Windows Store, and while the Windows Store's app selection is improving, it's still generally lacking in both quantity and quality.

The inclusion of the Office Home and Student RT suite is a major boon for Windows RT tablets, but licensing technicalities stamp out its legal use in the workplace.

"As sold, Office Home & Student 2013 RT Preview and the final edition are not designed for commercial, nonprofit, or revenue-generating activities," explains the Office Home & Student RT FAQ page. "However, organizations who purchase commercial use rights or have a commercial license to Office 2013 suites can use Office Home & Student 2013 RT for commercial, nonprofit, or revenue-generating activities."

Major bummer. Be sure to keep those considerations in mind when you're choosing between Windows RT and Windows 8 tablets for your company. With full-fledged Windows 8 tablets like the Acer W510 and Dell Latitude 10 starting to show up for $500—roughly the same price as a Windows RT tablet—it's hard to recommend picking up a Windows RT tablet for your business.

Wikipedia/Wikimedia FoundationThe available upgrade paths from Windows 7 to Windows 8.

While you're deciding which version of Windows 8 is right for your SMB, keep in mind that your current Windows 7 installation may constrain your Windows 8 upgrade path. The chart above comes from the surprisingly comprehensive Wikipedia entry on the various Windows 8 editions, which also includes a massive spreadsheet that visually details which features are available in which editions of the operating system. While it’s a bit light on information about the specific utilities, it's a very handy resource for comparing the feature sets of Windows RT and the various Windows 8 editions at a glance.

Brad Chacos

Brad Chacos spends the days jamming to Spotify, digging through desktop PCs and covering everything from BYOD tablets to DIY tesla coils.
More by Brad Chacos

Chris Hoffman

Chris Hoffman is a tech geek who's been writing about everything technology-related for years. When he's not writing about gadgets and software, he's probably using them in his spare time.
More by Chris Hoffman


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Webinar: Create business cards quickly in Word & Publisher

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AppId is over the quota

Need business cards right this minute? Whether you're forming a new start-up business or just need something in a pinch, Office has built-in business card templates to help. In this week's webinar, we'll show you how to create a business card in Word and Publisher at a moment's notice.

Can't see this video? It's also available at Microsoft Showcase. There is also a 30-second trailer.

What you will learn at Tuesday's webinar: 

Tips for making an effective business card Find the right template Design tips Smackdown: Publisher vs. Word (Bet on Publisher!)

References for this webinar:

Go to http://aka.ms/offweb for more information on how to join the series.

--Doug Thomas


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Saturday, December 29, 2012

The new Office is now available for business customers

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AppId is over the quota

Business customers around the world can now purchase the on-premises versions of the new Office products--including Office 2013, Exchange Server 2013, Lync Server 2013, SharePoint Server 2013, Project 2013 and Visio 2013--through Microsoft Volume Licensing. Broad availability of the new Office through retail and online channels is planned for the first quarter of 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.

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. Here are a few things about the new Office that we think are great:

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.*

To order, begin testing or learn more about Office 2013, please ask your Microsoft Account Team or your Microsoft Partner. Whether you're ready to buy the on-premises Office 2013 products available now or want to use the cloud services available early next year, try the new Office today and let us know what you think.

 --Sanjay Manchanda, Office Team 

 *Windows 7 or Windows 8 operating system required

**HD video camera required for high-definition video conferencing


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Thursday, December 27, 2012

Office 365 saves your domain, and Jake’s business

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AppId is over the quota

Poor Jake, his smart business proposal has them in the palm of his hands, but his fatal mistake is too many online places to call home. Office 365 has a better way to bring all your business email addresses and domains together and give your customers an easy way to interact with you.

Find out more about Office 365 including how to start a free trial.

--Doug Thomas


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Thursday, November 29, 2012

Social Business – 10 Commandments Before You Start

Social Business – 10 Commandments Before You Start « Digital Dialogue function clearSearch() {document.search_form.s.value = "";} .recentcomments a{display:inline !important;padding:0 !important;margin:0 !important;}adobe.com      Digital Dialogue / Social Business – 10 Commandments Before You Startby adobeapacEngagement (2)Social (1)Social Business (1)Social Media (6)Will Bosma (1)  

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Friday, October 19, 2012

Enjoy Office business intelligence - data such as people

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This post is brought to you by Steve Tullis group program manager of the Office business intelligence team.

This is the third introductory post from the Excel family - Office BI. If you have not read Jane's post about the Excel client, or Dan's post about the browser-based versions of Excel, I encourage you to do so, as they are great overviews and provide foundational information about how we decided in what to invest, and how those investments are manifest in the Excel products. In this post, I will share the business intelligence specific story which is designed to provide an end-to-end experience that both empowers end users to have a great conversations with their data, and enables IT to manage the risk inherent with empowered end users.

At the beginning of this product cycle, we started with a fairly simple statement - empower you to gain insights from your data with proven and familiar Microsoft products that make it easier to work smarter and faster - and feel we've not only met the intent of that statement, but, in doing so, have changed the end user BI game. Let me explain...

imageOften, the first step in analyzing and exploring data is the hardest: I have data... how do I connect to it? Explore it? Shape it? Format it? Create visualizations based on it? Great questions! The answer is Excel 2013 which has what Jane in her blog post called "more smarts built in" - Excel understands your data, and your context, and helps you improve your productivity by:

· Recognizing how you are shaping your data, and suggesting how to finish more quickly with Flash fill

· Enabling you to quickly and easily preview and apply conditional formatting, suggest and create charts, Pivot Tables, and tables using quick analysis

· Introducing a new way for you to easily navigate multidimensional and tabular data models, and create trend charts to analyze information over time - quick explore.

Essentially, we have removing much of the start-up friction you may have experienced in the past. A few keystrokes and clicks of the mouse to select the best recommended options - and you well are great on the way to gaining insights from your data. And you don't have to be a professional analyst to get these results.

I'd like to make a bold statement: you now have the only self service end user BI tool you need in Excel 2013. The foundation, we started by introducing new analysis capabilities such as as the timeline slicer, calculated OLAP fields, quick explore building on Excel, then extending existing capabilities such allowing slicers directly on Excel tables.image Not satisfied with that, we integrated the xVelocity in-memory engine directly into Excel - which means the ability to create and manage larger, more complex data models, as well as new features such as pivot tables across multiple Excel tables. Still not satisfied, we integrated the Powerpivot add - in to enable more advanced users to directly manage the in-memory data model. Wait... there's more... we then integrated power view which allows you to create compelling data visualizations designed to be highly interactive - essentially, a new mechanism for beautiful, immersive, ad-hoc analysis and reporting, directly in Excel. Together, this means that when you install Excel, it is likely the only self service end user BI tool you need.

And here's another bold statement: all data is in Excel experience. You want your data, analysis and exploration when and where you need it Excel 2013 investments that support:

· End user tools beyond the desktop. We continue our BI related investments in browser-based Excel adding support for query tables, the field list / well to allow re-pivoting of your PivotTable and PivotCharts, etc. We therefore made sure new investments, such as timeline slicers, xVelocity integration, and power view integration are also supported via the browser.

· Sharing your analysis and insights. 2013 brings the next release of PerformancePoint services, further enabling your corporate dashboard and score card needs. Additionally, enhancements in Excel services allow easier embedding, so you can have your data in its most effective context.

· Easily consume other data. Excel interactive view, described in Dan's post, provides a one-click solution which automatically presents data in an interactive view complete with custom filters and charts, bringing the power of Excel to the Web. Learn more on ExcelMashup.com.

These investments take the power of Excel beyond the desktop - viewing, editing, analyzing, exploring, embedding, sharing and consuming enabled for the top browsers and devices on the market.

For end users, information workers, and BI professionals, this blog post has described amazing new capabilities and opportunities... for the IT professional, it has likely raised your stress level: you can just imagine a proliferation of spreadsheets containing corporate data in massive models; essentially less control over data and where and how users are leveraging that data.

image

This section is for you - the IT professional or the corporate compliance manager. We have introduced a new suite of capabilities:

· SpreadSheet compare, which allows you to compare any two versions of a spreadsheet to see what has changed.

· The inquire add - in which helps organizations automate inventory, risk management, analysis, auditing, and remediation for critical spreadsheets.

· The audit and control management (ACM) server which discovers, analyzes and manages critical spreadsheets and ships as part of SharePoint Server

These capabilities are designed to help end users, risk and managers, and IT professionals manage compliance your risk and compliance needs.

Wow. Seems like a lot. And the info above is just the introduction - future blog posts will provide additional details and examples. But, ultimately, have we changed the end user BI game? I think so. Try it, and I think you'll agree.


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Saturday, September 22, 2012

CEO Shantanu Narayen’s Commencement Address at Berkeley’s Haas School of Business

On Saturday, May 19, Adobe’s CEO Shantanu Narayen delivered the commencement address at the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley to MBA graduates, family, friends, faculty and staff. Check out the video and text of his speech on the Adobe Corporate Blog.

As the core of his message, Shantanu shared three secrets to thriving in the midst of constant change:

1) The answer isn’t in a spreadsheet (rely on your gut)

2) Know your Zen (understand and stay true to yourself)

3) Surround yourself with people smarter than you (build a team that brings out your best)

Through the course of the address, Shantanu also reflected on his own Haas graduation and shared the advice that Adobe co-founder John Warnock gave him when he took the CEO job: “If you don’t like your job, you have only one person to blame.”

Congratulations to all the Haas MBA graduates!


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Thursday, September 20, 2012

CEO Shantanu Narayen’s Commencement Address at Berkeley’s Haas School of Business

On Saturday, May 19, Adobe’s CEO Shantanu Narayen delivered the commencement address at the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley to MBA graduates, family, friends, faculty and staff. Check out the video and text of his speech on the Adobe Corporate Blog.

As the core of his message, Shantanu shared three secrets to thriving in the midst of constant change:

1) The answer isn’t in a spreadsheet (rely on your gut)

2) Know your Zen (understand and stay true to yourself)

3) Surround yourself with people smarter than you (build a team that brings out your best)

Through the course of the address, Shantanu also reflected on his own Haas graduation and shared the advice that Adobe co-founder John Warnock gave him when he took the CEO job: “If you don’t like your job, you have only one person to blame.”

Congratulations to all the Haas MBA graduates!


View the original article here

Thursday, September 13, 2012

DIY business cards with Office 2010

DIY Business Cards with Office 2010These days we meet and greeting people via social media or get introduced to them in e-Mail. But electronic handshakes still handing out business cards at conferences, meetings, to replace or even at parties (Yes, the personal and professional merged).

Office 2010 provides several ways to create professional business cards itself. Here is the overview:

Publisher: Design & your own business cards print   

We say "professional"?  Microsoft Publisher 2010 help you design and print cards that look as if you have a graphic designer hired and she are then ordered by a commercial printer.

Office Comics:Any of your business business card

A take on business cards from the lighter side.

Office-Léger:How to be a business card in 90 seconds (Video)

Make a business card so fast? Doug Thomas shows you how it with Office.com business card templates.

Outlook: Clip art for Outlook signatures and electronic business cards

Ever heard at an event and run out of business cards? You can then follow-up by an electronic included in e-Mail.

Word blog: Business cards in Word

You want a simple vanilla business card only with text, all you have to do is buy card stock and print your cards in Word.


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Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Join Us at Publishing Business Conference and Expo Next Week

Join Us at Publishing Business Conference and Expo Next Week « Adobe Digital Publishing function clearSearch() {document.search_form.s.value = "";} adobe.com      Adobe Digital Publishing / Join Us at Publishing Business Conference and Expo Next Weekby Adobe Digital Publishing Suite Team  

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Saturday, February 11, 2012

Why Outlook is not just strictly business

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AppId is over the quota

First up, if you use the Outlook Social Connector, you can get a recently released software update in our download center.

For those you don't know what the Outlook Social Connector is, watch this short video explaining how this free tool gives you a better way to view your contacts--including their social connections between Facebook and LinkedIn--while never leaving Outlook.

Need to learn more about the update? Read our recent blog post. I also made a video about the installation process of the Outlook Social Connector.

This video is an excerpt from my look behind of the scenes of the Office of Future video.

--Doug Thomas


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Guy Kawasaki's Guide to Writing a Business Plan

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Just at the beginning of starting a business?  Or mulling over an idea for one? Knowing how to structure and write a business plan is essential to stable your tantalizing idea against the marketplace.  Author, influencer, and venture capitalist, @ Guy Kawasaki, partnered with Office Web apps team to show you how to write effective one in Microsoft Word: get tips straight from an expert, and download his free guide from SkyDrive. And, one other thing: using the Word Web app makes it easy to share and collaborate on with your colleagues.


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Friday, February 10, 2012

Update on BlackBerry Business cloud services for Microsoft Office 365

Research in motion (RIM) has today on the heels of October of the open beta BlackBerry ® Business cloud services for Microsoft Office 365--a new service for enterprise Microsoft Exchange online extension on BlackBerry ® smartphones. The service makes sure that people of the industry-leading enterprise collaboration tools for on the go.

Some of the key features include:

Integration in the Administrative Office 365 portal for easy ManagementWireless synchronization with Microsoft Exchange online e-Mail, calendar and organizer data from a BlackBerry SmartphoneBlackBerry ® BalanceTM technology, unified view of the work and personal content on a BlackBerry smartphone while preserving the content separately and SecureAn presented one intuitive, Web-based console for it administrators who block access to employee self-service-Smartphone security functions, so that users easily reset a device password or remotely deploying, managing and securing BlackBerry Smartphones from AnywhereOnline or wipe a device in the loss or TheftBlackBerry security and encryption and device manageability

The service is subscriber of Office 365 suite or standalone Exchange online no additional charge to current mid-sized or Enterprise available and works with BlackBerry smartphones to enterprise or consumer data plans.

Go to www.blackberry.com/cloudservices to get started!


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