New premium creative content!
Office 365 subscribers, you can now easily add high quality, curated images, stickers, and icons to your personal or professional files in Excel, Word, Outlook and PowerPoint.
By Craig Ellis & Aimee Leong, Office PMs
Your feedback makes Office better
As we head into a new year and a new decade, we wanted to help you with one of your New Year’s resolution: give great feedback and play an active part in the Office development process.
Read moreCreate animated GIFs using PowerPoint
Have you ever had an idea for an animated GIF but didn’t know where to get started? With the new feature Export/Save As Animated GIF, you can now create your ideas in PowerPoint.
Read moreRedesigned Comments in Word
Take more control over your document feedback in the redesigned Comments pane in Word.
Read moreOpen your most important files faster on mobile
When you’re trying to get work done on the go, you expect experiences to be fast. To help you get back to your Office files instantly while using your mobile device, Word and PowerPoint on iOS now download your most recent and recommended files automatically!
Read moreAccessible email made easier
Ensuring the accessibility of your emails is your responsibility. By creating and sending accessible emails, you ensure that recipients can access, read, and use the information they contain.
Read moreIntroducing Office – your new go-to mobile app
Today we are excited to share a new vision for how people get work done on a phone – a new app that’s ambitious enough to simply be called Office.
Read moreAnnouncing new Office Insider Group Policy setting
If you’re an IT Admin and you already use Group Policy, you can now give a select group of Windows users the option to install Office Insider builds for themselves by using the Show the option for Office Insider policy setting.
Read moreAn Insiders guide to Microsoft Ignite 2019
Hey there, Office Insiders! It is t-minus one week (just about) until Ignite 2019 kicks off, and we are here today to give you a quick look into some of the sessions that you might want to keep an eye on.
Read moreMaking your PowerPoint slides work with a Screen Reader
Most people with low or no vision use a screen reader to use and work with their computers and mobile devices. Since they cannot see the slides in the presentation, they rely on the screen reader to “speak” the slide contents. As a presenter, you can make a few tweaks to your presentation that will ensure that your content works well with a screen reader.
Read moreMac Rotor – Links, Tables, and Headings Navigation in Word
Starting with Office 16.29, Microsoft Word now supports rotor navigation for links, tables, and headings within documents.
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