They tie in seamlessly with 365, and will even start and edit documents from within 365.
And again, 365 fixes all of this.įor those times when 365 can't provide a solution (say mail merge operations in MS Word, or pivot charts in Excel), you need a full desktop client. Gain the ability to easily share files, have security, a way to collaborate, a way to form online teams, etc.
In the end, they can choose to keep spendin 6-8 figures every year just to keep their infrastructure up to date, or change the paradigm. (2) Large companies that have dedicated IT staff, their own infrastructrure, and their own servers. Office 365 fixes this by providing all of these on a fixed cost (per user/per month) basis, similar to paying for TV service and phone service. They typically can't afford to have their own IT department, and while they need a server solution in-house can't afford one or aren't technically savvy enough to run one. (1) small company that wants internet, a website, and basic services (like accounting etc). However, you could expose yourself to serious and potentially harmful security risks. All of your Office 2010 apps will continue to function. Windows users who have a TechNet or MSDN subscription. Well, here's the problem: You basically have two types of companies out there. Support for Office 2010 ended on Octoand there will be no extension and no extended security updates. Earlier today, we let you know about the availability of Microsoft Office 2013 on MSDN and TechNet.