Large-scale changes await Microsoft Office. Developers began to implement the concept of the Fluid Office web platform, which involves the transformation of the office package into a more powerful tool, mainly focused on collaboration.
The developers have added the first interactive blocks within this project to Teams, OneNote, Outlook and Whiteboard.
Instead of tables, graphs, and lists that are static and tied to specific documents, Fluid components are collaboration modules that allow you to perform various tasks without leaving chat, email, and more. Simply put, this approach allows you to work with a document in a common environment without the need to run different programs.
The source notes that whatever developers have created with Fluid is the biggest change to Office in decades. At the time of the presentation last year, the Fluid concept looked like a promising option for the development of an office suite.
However, it is now clear how large-scale the transformation of ordinary office applications can be.
Soon, every meeting in Microsoft Teams will come with built-in collaboration notes. Notes will appear not only in meetings, but also in the Outlook calendar. Anyone with the appropriate permissions can write something in the notes at any time, and those adjustments will appear for everyone in the meeting online.
When a new task is added, it is immediately synchronized with other tasks in Microsoft 365, and meeting notes are automatically synchronized with the Outlook calendar, where they can also be edited online.
This summer, Microsoft is also turning Whiteboard into a canvas for Fluid components. The app has been around for a long time as a collaboration tool, and now it's getting a redesign part of the Fluid concept.
Microsoft confirms the leaked Windows 11 images and filed a DMCA complaint with Google
An early build of the new Windows 11 operating system that has hit the Internet has caused a lot of buzz. However, Microsoft itself, with enviable self-control, did not immediately react to this fact.
The source of the information leak was the Beebom news site, which published an ISO image of the new OS. In the end, Microsoft's nerves also broke.
The Japanese division of the company has filed a DMCA complaint against Beebom and asked Google to remove from its search links an article on an Indian website that distributed an ISO image of unreleased Windows 11. thereby confirming that the distribution distributed to the Network actually belongs to her.
It should be noted that some netizens have expressed doubts that the published OS was actually released by Microsoft and not the work of some craftsman.
These thoughts were caused by the fact that, despite the new interface, icons and windows, Windows 11 contains many elements borrowed from the current version of Windows 10. Even the internal files of the OS contain information that hints that under the outer shell of Windows 11 hides Windows 10 .
However, the fact that Microsoft filed a complaint dispels these doubts. The software giant scheduled a presentation for June 24, which will detail the new generation of Windows.