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Microsoft Office 97 (version 8.0) is the fifth major release for Windows of Microsoft Office, released by Microsoft on November 19, 1996. [3] A Mac OS equivalent, Microsoft Office 98 Macintosh Edition, was released on January 6, 1998.
Windows 3.0 has a developer credits page which may be accessed by setting the focus to the desktop (by minimizing all windows and clicking on an open area of the desktop) then typing win30 followed by F3 and ← Backspace in quick succession. This causes the developer credits to appear on the desktop in the form of the email names of the crew.
With the release of Microsoft Office 2007 came the "Fluent User Interface" or "Fluent UI", which replaced menu bars and customizable toolbars with a single "Office menu", a miniature toolbar known as "quick-access toolbar" and what came to be known as the ribbon: multiple tabs, each holding a toolbar bearing buttons and occasionally other controls.
3. Left-click a product or service | Click Add to Toolbar. Want to make your toolbar stand out? Customize it by adding personalized labels and images. 1. Sign in to AOL Desktop Gold. 2. Right-click the toolbar icon you'd like to edit | Click Edit. 3. Search for or select an icon. 4. Enter a label name. 5. Click Save.
The new Office Theme file format (.THMX) is shared between Word, Excel, PowerPoint and Outlook email messages. Similar themes are also available for data reports in Access and Project or shapes in Visio. Quick Styles are galleries with a range of styles based on the current theme.
There's no reason to waste time looking through your Start menu to launch Desktop Gold when you can have the shortcut ready and waiting for you right on your desktop.
Access: November 1992: Yes No No Excel: 1987: Yes Yes Yes OneNote: November 19, 2003: Yes Yes Yes Outlook: January 16, 1997: Yes Yes Yes PowerPoint: May 22, 1990: Yes Yes Yes Power BI: July 11, 2011: Yes Yes Yes Project: 1984: Yes Yes No Publisher: 1991: Yes No No Visio: 1992: Yes No No [1] Sway: 2014: Yes Yes No Word: October 25, 1983: Yes Yes ...
PowerPoint version 14.0 (2010, 2011 for Mac) could read and write Transitional, and also read but not write Strict. PowerPoint version 15.0 and later (beginning 2013, 2016 for Mac) can read and write both Transitional and Strict formats. The reason for the two variants was explained by Microsoft: [278]