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Microsoft Excel 2010

Microsoft Excel 2010

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Microsoft Excel 2010

 
 
List Price: $139.99
Our Price: $120.94
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SKU:  

MSCD01967WI

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Features
  • Microsoft Excel 2010 makes it possible to analyze, manage,

  • And share information in more ways than ever before, helping you make better, smarter decisions

  • Find the right data quickly with new filter enhancement in PivotTable views

  • Analyze data quickly--highlight specific data with new and improved Conditional Formatting options

  • Display data in a dynamic and interactive way with PivotChart views

  • Highlight data trends by creating data charts in a single cell with new Sparklines


Description

Microsoft Excel 2010 makes it possible to analyze, manage, and share information in more ways than ever before, helping you make better, smarter decisions. New data analysis and visualization tools help you track and highlight important data trends. Easily upload your files to the Web and work simultaneously with others online. Access your important data on the go from almost any Web browser.


Product Details
Product Length:0.0 inches
Product Width:0.0 inches
Product Height:0.0 inches
Product Weight:0.25 pounds
Package Length:7.5 inches
Package Width:5.5 inches
Package Height:1.0 inches
Package Weight:0.25 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 7 reviews

System Requirements
Platform:Windows Vista / Windows 7 / Windows XP
Media:CD-ROM
Item Quantity:1

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:2.5 ( 7 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

22 of 26 found the following review helpful:


3Excel is Great, but is this a giant leap forward? No.  Sep 23, 2010 By J. Knapp
I bought it for the "sparklines" feature and was really shocked at how useless they were. There is only one way to use them, they lack any flexibility, and are like a jpeg, not a chart.

Besides that, there isn't much new. I bought it because they said it fixed the bugs with VBA script and charting. Believe me, nothing has changed.

Our business is going to freeware because the amount you have to pay for MS applications and the increasing lack of support for their products (not having a help file? Puulllleeeeaaase!!)lend me to want to go that way, even though I know I would have to have MS for some things.

I'm tired of having to buy "Bibles" to figure out MS products, and then really having to do it myself in the end. I learn more on the internet than I do from MS, or Bibles.

Buy it if you have to have the latest or greatest, but it's not much of an improvement over 2007 and it has even more compatability issues.

7 of 9 found the following review helpful:


1give me the old version please.  Nov 30, 2011 By codyaya "codyaya"
I've been using Excel for roughly 20 years. When I got my new PC with Windows 7, this version of Excel was loaded. At first, it seems this version has more features, which is fine. But when it comes to actually USING this software, get ready to fume. What used to take 2 steps now takes about 10. It's SO un-user-friendly compared to the older, XP, version that I'm about to just junk it.

Poor job Excel. You took a simplistic, easy to use program and turned it into a confusing mess.

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:


3They forced me into the 2010 version!  Mar 06, 2012 By voption
After taking 6 years to semi-master Excel 2003, my XP-Pro machine died & Mr. Gates "forced" me into up-dating to Excel 2010. If you need more than one Office component---seriously consider buying the Office Suite instead of the individual Programs. MS will essentially force-you, via "bundling" to buy Programs you may not want, need, or ever use, however, the bundled-price of the Officfe Suite is a better deal, over-all. For those of us "trained" on Ofice 2003, you will find many features identical & easy to use. You will, however, need "practice" on running Excel 2010--many useful features are hard-to-locate or have been combined with other features/preferences. (or just eliminated) If you want to bail on MS completely?--I strongly suggest OpenOffice aka LibreOffice. The time it takes to get-up-to-speed is similar...without the price of entry, in-play.


1Not so hot  May 02, 2012 By Richard D. Mccabe "Richard"
It is unstable: (1) after you register on a cell it may change when you begin typing and (2) your data entries may change and you may not know it.
It is difficult to find the functions because they are not organized well and there are many, many more of them than most people would need. Macros should be used for such functions.
You cannon open two windows of Excel at the same time. This means you have to waste time, ink and paper printing out the spreadsheet when you want to transfer data from a larger spreadsheet to a smaller one.
On the whole, there are better freeware spread sheets out there so why would you spend money to get this turkey?

12 of 19 found the following review helpful:


5PowerPivot, Sparklines, Pivot Table Improvements  Sep 27, 2010 By Bill Jelen "MrExcel"
Excel continues to improve with this release from Microsoft. If you are upgrading from Excel 2007, you will notice these improvements:
1) Pivot table improvements. Calculate % of Parent Item, Rank, and more. Create dashboards with visual filters called Slicers. Fill in the blank cells along the row area of a pivot table. Create Asymmetric Pivot Tables with Named Sets.
2) The free PowerPivot add-in works only with Excel 2010 and offers the ability to create pivot tables from data on different worksheets. You also can process more than a million rows of data.
3) Sparklines allow you to create hundreds of tiny, word-sized charts in a few clicks. While they aren't as robust as the Sparklines that Tufte wrote about, you can use some mid-level Excel formulas to add labels and shading to the sparklines.
4) New functions for scientists. Better stats functions. Equation Editor. The AGGREGATE function.
5) Publish your workbooks to the web using the SkyDrive. Interact with and/or edit the worksheet in the browser.
6) Improved Paste Options throughout Office 2010. See what the paste will look like before you do it.
7) Unlike Excel 2007, this version of Excel offers a File menu, which is vastly improved.
8) Unlike Excel 2007, you can easily customize the ribbon interface. Move icons around or build your own ribbon tab.
9) Various improvements throughout the product. Examples: Smarter Fill-Handle Double-Click to copy formulas to the bottom of the data set. Dramatically improved background removal tool for pictures. Filter dropdowns now offer text search. The ability to show negative data bars in the new Conditional Formatting options that were introduced in Excel 2007. More processes can take advantage of multi-core technology. Pattern fills return for charts.
10) Improved macro recorder support for chart creation.

If you are upgrading from Excel 2003 or earlier, you will enjoy the increased grid size (1 million rows x 16K columns), better data visualizations such as Data Bars, Icon Sets, SmartArt, and a new Charting Engine. Sort/Filter by color. Functions introduced in Excel 2007 include IFERROR, SUMIFS, COUNTIFS, and the Cube Functions.

See all 7 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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