Whats in Microsoft Office 2010 ?

MS Office 2010 logo

Microsoft Office 2010 logo (c)

Similar to earlier releases, Microsoft Office 2010 is available in several versions, each designed
with a specific group of users in mind, and each accessible via PC, browser, or phone.
Here’s what you’ll find in each version of Microsoft Office 2010:

 

  • Office Professional Plus 2010: This is for the high-end user who collaborates with others, manages data, and needs flexibility, mobility, and coauthoring capabilities. This edition includes Word 2010, Excel 2010, PowerPoint 2010, One Note 2010, Outlook 2010, Publisher 2010, Access 2010, Share Point Workspace 2010, Info-path 2010, and Communicator 2010
  • Office Professional 2010: This designed for the business user who needs all the power of the traditional applications as well as access to data management tools. This version includes Word 2010, Excel 2010, PowerPoint 2010, One Note 2010, Outlook 2010,Publisher 2010, and Access 2010
  • Office Standard 2010: This removes Access 2010 from the mix. It offers users who work with documents, worksheets, marketing materials, presentations, notebooks, and of-course e-mail and schedules just what they need: Word 2010, Excel 2010, PowerPoint 2010, One Note 2010, Outlook 2010, and Publisher 2010
  • Office Home and Business 2010: This one streamlines the suite to the basic applications used by small business and home users: Word 2010, Excel 2010, PowerPoint 2010, One Note 2010, and Outlook 2010
  • Office Home and Student 2010: This is geared toward student and home users, offering the traditional applications for creating documents, worksheets, presentations, and workbooks with Word 2010, Excel 2010, PowerPoint 2010, and OneNote 2010
  • Office Professional Academic 2010: This is designed for faculty members who need access to all the core applications—Word 2010, Excel 2010, Outlook 2010,PowerPoint 2010 as well as One Note 2010, Access 2010, and Publisher 2010
  • Office Starter 2010: This is for the beginning user who wants to work with only Word 2010 and Excel 2010

 

Office 2010 System Requirements:

In keeping with green efforts to maximize efficiency on systems users already have, Office
2010 was designed for any system capable of running Office 2007 Here are the suggested
system requirements for Office 2010:

  • Computer and processor: 500-MHz processor or higher
  • Memory: 512 MB (megabytes) of RAM or more
  • Hard disk space: 2 GB (gigabytes) less if custom installation is done
  • Drive: CD-ROM or DVD drive
  • Display: 1024 by 768 or higher resolution monitor
  • Windows 7 (32-bit or 64-bit), Windows Server 2003 R2 with SP2 (32-bit or 64-bit),Operating system: Windows XP SP3 (32-bit), Windows Vista SP1 (32-bit or 64-bit), or Windows Server 2008 with SP1 (32-bit or 64-bit) Terminal Server

Ill post more about Windows Microsoft Office 2010 soon as I explorer more about it.. till then stay tuned

NVIDIA GEFORCE 3D VISION

NVIDIA GEFORCE 3D VISION

NVIDIA GEFORCE 3D VISION

3D gaming!! That’s going to be the
new mantra for gamers around the
world. With the new 3D Vision by
Nvidia, gaming is going to look a whole
lot different in the years to come. So what
exactly does it take to make your system
3D ready? Apart from the obvious, which
includes a 100 Hz monitor and the 3D
Vision glasses you will need at least an
Nvidia 8800GT card to be able to play
games in 3D. As of now there are only a
couple of monitors that support refresh
rates of over 100 Hz. These would include
the Sam-sung Sync-Master 2233RZ and the
View-sonic VX2265wm.
The monitor that was used to test
the Ge-force 3D Vision glasses was the
Sam-sung Sync-master 2233RZ along

with a 9600GT card. With the new 3D
glasses on, games looked way different
than conventional 2D ones. This is
true especially when you take into
consideration racing and FPS games.
The overall depth and feel that you get
with these on is nothing compared to
games played in 2D. Over and above all
this the 3D Vision has support for over
300 games with Resident Evil 5 and
Batman: Arkham Asylum being the most
compatible of the lot. In other words they
are 3D Vision ready. You can also view
the overall compatibility of a game by
accessing the Nvidia control panel where
the games are given a rating such as 3D
Vision ready, Excellent, Good and Fair.

SPECIFICATIONS:

http://www.nvidia.com
OS: Windows Vista / 7; CPU: Intel Core 2 Duo or AMD
Athlon X2; Memory: 2 GB; Display monitor: 120 Hz
(LCD), 100 Hz and above (CRT)

Singularity gameplay

Video recorded by : Nfxcr3w

Pc configuration:-

Processor: Pentium 4 over clocked to 3.6 Ghz

Graphics card used: HT HD4670 1gb

Ram: 2GB

Hard disk : 40gb

Minimum System Requirements For Vista and Windows 7:
3D hardware accelerator card required — 100% DirectX 9.0c-compliant 256 MB video card and drivers*
Microsoft Windows Vista or Windows 7
Intel Pentium D (dual core) 2.8GHz or AMD Athlon X2 4800+ or better
2 GB of RAM
8 GB of uncompressed hard disk space (plus 400 MB for the Windows swap file and 12 KB free for saved games)
A 100% Windows Vista or Windows 7 compatible computer system including:
DirectX 9.0c (Included)
100% DirectX 9.0c-compliant true 16-bit sound card and drivers
100% Windows Vista or Windows 7 compatible mouse, keyboard and drivers
100% Windows Vista or Windows 7 compatible 6x speed DVD-ROM drive (600 K/sec sustained transfer rate) and drivers**
512 kB/sec upstream internet connection required to host

*Supported Chipsets for Windows Vista and Windows 7:

All NVIDIA GeForce 8800 GT 256 MB RAM and better chipsets (excluding GeForce 9400)

All ATI Radeon X1800 256 MB RAM and better chipsets (excluding X1800 GTO, Radeon HD2400, Radeon HD2600, and Radeon HD3450)

Motherboard integrated video chipsets not supported!

Recommended System Requirements For Vista and Windows 7:
3D hardware accelerator card required — 100% DirectX 9.0c-compliant 256 MB video card and drivers*
Microsoft Windows Vista or Windows 7
Intel Core2 Duo 3.0GHz or AMD Athlon X2 4800+ or higher processor
2 GB of RAM
8 GB of uncompressed hard disk space (plus 400 MB for the Windows swap file and 12 KB free for saved games)
A 100% Windows Vista or Windows 7 compatible computer system including:
DirectX 9.0c (Included)
100% DirectX 9.0c-compliant true 16-bit sound card and drivers
100% Windows Vista or Windows 7 compatible mouse, keyboard and drivers
100% Windows Vista or Windows 7 compatible 6x speed DVD-ROM drive (600 K/sec sustained transfer rate) and drivers**

*Recommended Chipsets for Windows Vista or Windows 7:
NVIDIA GeForce 8800 GT
ATI Radeon HD 3850

TAG:

Gaming, pc, Singularity,

How to Dual Boot Windows 7 & XP, when Win 7 installed first before XP ?

Hi! this is Sonicbom. I m just a student and doing specialization in Information technology. Now coming to point lets talk about Windows one of the heaviest brand name in IT field. Recently this giant company launched Windows 7 in the market . A mind blowing piece of work with enough eye candy to fall in love with it. But wait windows7 is still fresh as morning dew water. Many developers are yet make their development and API to perfectly suitable for windows 7 . And this makes Windows 7 still a thing You want but cant utilize it at fullest capacity . Thus here comes XP and Vista in scene.

Myself being curous like a cat wanted to use Windows7 as well but cant stay away from XP for few comptability issues ok here I stop my story and let me describe how I installed it.

How to Dual Boot Windows 7 & XP, when Win 7 installed first before XP ?

  • I’ve just upgraded my pc’s harddisk. I’ve installed Win 7 first, and then installed Win XP. That left me with only being able to boot into XP. So I needed a way to re-activate booting into Win 7, and have the option to boot into XP also.
  • I Googled around, but couldn’t find what I was looking for which should easy for me to understand. I found hints, but no direct, step-by-step, simple to follow instructions.  But hey I thank my friendly forum members of Prodigits.co.uk to give me hints regarding this.
  • Turns out the solution is very simple with EasyBCD.
  1. If you installed Win 7 first, then installed XP, then right now you can only boot into XP. So do the following from XP:
  2. Download and install EasyBCD (link).
  3. Inside EasyBCD
  4. Click the ‘Add/Remove Entries’ Button (left side).
  5. Under the ‘Add an Entry‘ section, select ‘Windows NT/2k/XP/2k3‘ from the ‘Type‘ drop-down list.
  6. Optional, edit the ‘Name‘ field.
  7. Click ‘Add Entry‘.
  8. (Optional, under the ‘Manage Existing Entries‘ section, use the Up/Down Arrow buttons to change which OS is first in your list, then click ‘Save‘.)
  9. (Optional, Click the ‘Change Settings‘ button (left side). Then under the ‘Global Settings‘ section, use the ‘Default OS‘ drop-down to adjust which OS you want to automatically boot to by default. You may also adjust the ‘Bootloader Timeout‘ to adjust how long the boot menu will display before loading the default OS. Then Click the ‘Save Settings‘ button.)
  10. Click the ‘Manage Bootloader‘ button (left side).
  11. Under the ‘Bootloader Install Options‘ section, make sure the option for ‘Reinstall the Vista Bootloader‘ is selected. (For our purposes, Win7 Bootloader and Vista Bootloader are the same.)
  12. Click the ‘Write MBR‘ button
  13. That’s pretty much it. EasyBCD will write the required changes, and tell you that you need to reboot. Just reboot, and voila, you can now Dual-Boot between Win 7 and XP.
  • The above points assumes that Win 7 was installed first and was fully functional prior to installing XP. It also assumes that all the files required for booting are located on your Win 7 partition.

XP requires the following files for booting:

  • NTDETECT.COM
  • ntldr
  • boot.ini

The XP installer should have automatically put these files on your Win 7 partition.

This is as new to me as it is to you. But I’ve used the above steps, and it allowed me to Dual Boot Win 7 and XP on my PC.

Good Luck!

The above instructions work for me with EasyBCD v1.7.3. If you are using a different version, you may need to click around until you find similar options.