Word Excel Powerpoint Onenote



Microsoft Office Home and Student 2019 1 pc Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote. Condition is 'Brand New'. Shipped with USPS Media Mail. You will learn the basics of Excel, PowerPoint, Word, Outlook and OneNote. A full 5 hours of essential training. Select all topics or just the ones you need to brush upon. By the end of each 60 minutes you will have learned enough to know the basics of the application and be able to carry out day to day tasks efficiently and effectively. Word is a word processing program designed for manipulating word and text, Excel is a spreadsheet program for analyzing numbers and data sets, and PowerPoint is a presentation platform.

Change Language. Privacy & Cookies Legal Trademarks © 2021 Microsoft.com Legal Trademarks © 2021 Microsoft.com. Get OneNote for free! Works on Windows 7 or later and OS X Yosemite 10.10 or later.

Available at no extra cost through the Microsoft Student Advantage program, Office 365 gives students enrolled at the College access to a the latest versions of Office Suite, with all the features and functions you’ve come to expect.

Create, collaborate, edit, and view files – even when you’re on the go. Office 365 Pro Plus is anywhere you need it to be: your PC or laptop, tablet or phone.

How it Works

One
  • Office 365 Pro Plus is available to students enrolled for at least one credit at the College.
  • Each subscription license allows you to run Office 365 Pro Plus on up to 5 devices - Mac, PC, or mobile (iOS, Android, and Windows Phone).
  • Office 365 and can be used offline; however, students must connect to the Internet once every 30 days to verify they are still eligible for the program.

Getting Started

Office 365 provides a web-based portal where you can install Office 365 Pro Plus. Keep in mind that you have to be a local administrator on a computer to install Office 365 Pro Plus.

  1. Go to myoffice.mdc.edu
  2. Log in using your student e-mail address (typically firstname.lastname00x@mymdc.net) and password
  3. Click on the gear icon in the upper right corner, and then select Office 365 settings
  4. Click Software in the left menu
  5. Select your desired Language
  6. If you are installing Office for Windows, Microsoft recommends using the 32-bit installation
  7. Click Install to download and install the latest version of Office

Important: When logging in to Office 365 for the first time, click the OneDrive link on the top blue menu bar to unlock your 1 TB of cloud storage.

Your Office 365 Pro Plus subscription includes

For PC

  • Word
  • Excel
  • PowerPoint
  • OneNote
  • Access
  • Publisher
  • Outlook
  • Lync
  • InfoPath

For iPhone

  • Word Mobile
  • Excel Mobile
  • PowerPoint Mobile

Note: OneNote and Lync Mobile available as separate download.

For Android

Word Excel Powerpoint Onenote Download

  • Word Mobile
  • Excel Mobile
  • PowerPoint Mobile

Note: OneNote and Lync Mobile available as separate download.

Learning Center

June 15, 2020 - by Bill Jelen

What do you lose when you choose Microsoft Office Classic instead of Premium? A lot! Our recommendation at MrExcel is that you should never buy Office 2019. It is obsolete and missing important features.

While Classic Office provides the basic features, you won’t be getting any of the shiny new features that Microsoft is investing heavily in now.

The retail box for Microsoft Office 2019 Home & Student makes it clear that you are not getting Outlook, Access or Publisher when you buy Excel 2019. But in the feature description for Word, Excel, Power Point and OneNote it says that you are getting “Classic” instead of “Premium”. What does that really mean?

I don’t think it is fair for Microsoft to not explain what you are losing when you choose the Classic version of Excel. I can’t find any description of what you get in Excel Classic versus Excel Premium, so I made my own:

FeatureClassicPremium
Can use SUM function
VLOOKUP
XLOOKUP (superior to VLOOKUP in every way)
Automate with VBA
Automate with M (using Power Query)
Automate with TypeScript
Import PDF files Using Power Query
Fuzzy Matching in Power Query
Data Profiling in Power Query
Intellisene in Power Query
Create Pivot Tables
Set Defaults for Future Pivot Tables
Power Pivot
Collaborate: Multiple people editing same workbook
Dynamic Array formulas
Functions like SORT, FILTER, UNIQUE, SEQUENCE
Data Types for Geography, Stocks, Exchange Rates
STOCKHISTORY function for historical stock & exchange rates
Artificial Intelligence to analyze your data
Insert Cutout People in your documents
Smart Lookup
Sheet View (improvement on Custom Views)
Picture Transparency
Ink to Shape
Store variables in formulas with LET function

The simple fact: Excel 2019 includes most features released before March 2018. It does not include any of the new Artificial Intelligence features. You don’t get the new Wolfram Alpha data types. You won’t get the new calculation engine that was rewritten and released in September 2019. The Excel team describes the new collaboration feature as “Excel’s Moon Shot”, but you won’t be able to collaborate if you buy Office 2019.

If you want the latest and greatest features, the best route is to subscribe to Microsoft 365. There are various plans for home, student, or business. Any of those should deliver the power you need in Excel.

How about Word? What is lost if you choose Word Classic instead of Premium? You won’t get the Dictation feature. The Resume creator is missing. Ink gestures, the new commenting tools, follow-ups, and Transform to Sway are all missing. The “Editor” icon offers improvements to grammar and spelling checker in Word.

In PowerPoint, you will lose: Subtitles and Live Captions for Presentations. The AI-based Designer is not available. Enhancements to Morph are not available. You can not re-use slides.

Several features are common to Office Premium and will be missing from Excel, Word, and PowerPoint: Ink to Shape, Picture Transparency, Cutout People, Sensitivity Labels, @Mentions in Comments.

Word Excel Powerpoint Onenote And Outlook

MrExcel’s recommendation: Take Office 2019 out of your shopping cart and go with a subscription to Microsoft 365.

Word Excel Powerpoint Onenote Outlook

Thanks to Word MVP Ute Simon and Office MVP David Benaim for providing the lists of features missing from Word and Power Point.