Microsoft Office enables efficient work, studying, and creative projects.
Microsoft Office is a highly popular and trusted suite of office tools around the world, comprising everything essential for efficient work with documents, spreadsheets, presentations, and much more. Works well for both industrial applications and personal use – while you’re at home, school, or your place of work.
What components make up Microsoft Office?
-
Dark mode support
Reduces eye strain and enhances usability in low-light environments.
-
Images in Excel cells
Makes it easy to visually enhance spreadsheets with embedded images.
-
Support for Microsoft Loop
Introduces live components for collaborative content in Office apps.
-
Focus mode in Word
Reduces distractions by hiding toolbars and emphasizing text.
-
File sharing with OneDrive
Securely share files and collaborate on them from anywhere using cloud storage.
Microsoft Visio
Microsoft Visio is an application specifically created for visual modeling, diagramming, and schematic design, employed to showcase detailed information visually and systematically. It is crucial in presenting processes, systems, and organizational structures, schematics of IT infrastructure architecture or technical drawings in visual form. The program delivers a comprehensive set of ready-made elements and templates, easily transferable to the workspace and connect seamlessly, designing logical and comprehensible schemes.
Power BI
Power BI is a powerful business analytics and data visualization platform from Microsoft built to simplify and visualize dispersed data in the form of interactive dashboards and reports. This platform is designed for analysts and data practitioners, for general users who prefer understandable tools for analysis without complex technical background. With Power BI Service, cloud-based report publication is seamless, updated and available internationally across different devices.
- Office with no unwanted background software or services
- Office without mandatory user registration for first use