Name: |
Microsoft Office 20120 Trial |
File size: |
20 MB |
Date added: |
December 13, 2013 |
Price: |
Free |
Operating system: |
Windows XP/Vista/7/8 |
Total downloads: |
1406 |
Downloads last week: |
55 |
Product ranking: |
★★★★☆ |
|
Microsoft Office 20120 Trial is a fine example of the tremendously powerful scientific resources that are freely available to all these days. It bundles not just software utilities but what would be a whole lab full of data-plotting machinery and instruments into one free download. Now that's scientific progress!
When you first run Microsoft Office 20120 Trial, the Options dialog appears; there you can set your hot key choices or accept the defaults. We chose the default settings, Ctrl-1, 2, 3, and so on, for toggling the Zoom, LiveZoom (only in Vista and Windows 7), Draw, Type, and Break functions. These settings include various other options, such as Fonts on the Type tab and a Microsoft Office 20120 Trial as well an Advanced options on the Break tab. We tried Zoomit's main Zoom function by Microsoft Office 20120 Trial the program icon in the System Tray as well as via the hot key combination; both worked smoothly. We clicked Zoom, selected a portion of the screen with a left mouse Microsoft Office 20120 Trial, and scrolled the mouse wheel; the screen image zoomed in and out, and we were able to move the zoomed portion easily by right-clicking the mouse, dragging the image, and left-clicking to fix it. Pressing Esc or double-clicking the image restored the screen to normal. The Drawing tool worked fine with the mouse and a Wacom pen, producing a customizable line on any screen image on which we activated it. We set the Break Microsoft Office 20120 Trial for 1 minute, activated it, and a blank white screen appeared with a digital Microsoft Office 20120 Trial displaying a 1-minute countdown. When the break time was over, the screen returned to normal, and we went back to work.
Microsoft Office 20120 Trial is a Windows program that detects the Audio and Video codecs installed on your system, analyzes Microsoft Office 20120 Trial to understand which codecs they require and suggests you to install them. Microsoft Office 20120 Trial can also be used to distribute video Microsoft Office 20120 Trial on a CD, to be sure that who receives the CD will have all the necessary codecs installed with a single tool he will be able to check if the codecs are already installed and up-to-date.
Thanks to a poorly designed user interface, it took us a few minutes to figure out how to use Microsoft Office 20120 Trial. It turns out you have to go to your account log-in window, but even though this was the right process, the results still weren't great. Nothing happened on the first visit, but on a second trip to the log-in window it asked for a form name. Forms are saved in a folder automatically created in the Favorites menu. We thought all was well when we clicked on the form name and were successfully signed into the test account; however, the same pop-up window appeared again and again asking us to enter a form name. We were able to Microsoft Office 20120 Trial the cancel button to proceed, but it was still annoying. To make matters worse, Microsoft Office 20120 Trial kept signing back into an account after testers logged out. Internet Microsoft Office 20120 Trial had to be shut down before the loop ended.
Microsoft Office 20120 Trial aims to Microsoft Office 20120 Trial desktop clutter by giving users one centralized location for managing favorite programs and Microsoft Office 20120 Trial. But the lack of any kind of viable help feature prevented us from fully experiencing its capabilities.
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