Beta 1-derful: The 'Top 30' List
As you
may have seen,
yesterday evening we released Office 12 Beta 1 to our technical beta
testers. We finished up build 3417.6 last week and declared it to be Beta
1, followed by a few days of media verification (testing the CDs)
and getting it ready for download. As I write, our 10,000 technical beta
testers are furiously downloading the product. After two years of intense design,
implementation, and iteration, this is a milestone the whole team is really
proud of. Brian Jones did a great job of summarizing
some
of the achievements and goals of the release in his blog today.
The product team in Redmond had a party last Friday afternoon to celebrate.
Our hard work was rewarded by a number of vegetable crudite platters, several
hundred Swedish meatballs (too bad Raymond
wasn't there) and a tray of pablum potato skins. (What did you expect? It's
only a beta.) The stereo system was
pumping "Ice Ice Baby", and people were lined up around the edges of the room like a junior high dance. Unfortunately, after waiting 10 minutes in line I finally got to the food and
found out I was supposed to pick up a plate before I got in line. So, I
just gave up and went back upstairs to work. People who showed their ID to
get alcoholic beverages got "Beta 1" stamped on their hand, which I thought was
a nice touch.
If you are lucky enough to be a beta tester for Beta 1, please respect your beta
test agreement and post feedback only through the private
beta newsgroups you have access to and not here on my blog. You'll get me
in trouble! :)
If you're didn't get selected for Beta 1, that's OK. You can keep reading
about the new user interface here; there's a lot I haven't covered
yet!
I've been blogging long enough now that many of the questions I receive through
e-mail are covered in posts from the past. With more people reading every
week, it's only natural that not everyone will have read everything I've
written.
So, in honor of Beta 1, here are the top 30 articles you should read if you
want to familiarize yourself with the user interface changes in Office 12.
If you read these 30 articles, you'll have a good start at understanding what
we're doing, why we're doing it, and how we're validating it.
Consider this list a "best-of" from my first two months of blogging.
Posts about the Ribbon and how it works:
- Enter the Ribbon
[It's All About Context](../jensenh/its-all-about-context)
- Dialog Launchers
- Why is it called the Ribbon?
- Stroking the Keys in Office 12
- Scaling Up, Scaling Down
- A
Disappearing Act
Posts about Galleries, Formatting, and Results-Oriented Design:
- I'm In Louvre! (Galleries: Part 1 of 3)
[Visualize Whirled Peas (Galleries: Part 2 of 3)](../jensenh/visualize-whirled-peas-galleries-part-2-of-3)
- Results-Oriented Design (Galleries: Part 3 of 3)
- Formatting: An Act In Three Plays
- Saddle Up to the MiniBar
Why did we make a new UI for Office 12?
- The Why of the New UI (Part 1)
[Ye Olde Museum Of Office Past (Why the UI, Part 2)](../jensenh/ye-olde-museum-of-office-past-why-the-ui-part-2-2)
- Combating the Perception of Bloat (Why the UI, Part 3)
- New Rectangles to the Rescue? (Why the UI, Part 4)
- Tipping the Scale (Why the UI, Part 5)
- Inside Deep Thought (Why the UI, Part 6)
- No Distaste for Paste (Why the UI, Part 7)
- Grading On the Curve (Why the UI, Part 8)
The philosophies, ideas, and design tenets behind the new UI:
- Mythbusters: The Office 12 New UI
[Be Willing To Be Wrong](../jensenh/be-willing-to-be-wrong)
- What programs get the new Office UI?
- Most People Are Not Trained In Geology
- The Importance Of Labels
- For Sale By Owner
Usability techniques and validation of the new UI:
- More Than Just the Two-Way Mirror
[Usability Redux](../jensenh/usability-redux)
Comments
Anonymous
November 17, 2005
Congrats on Beta 1!
Will the beta download also be available to MSDN subscribers, or only to those specifically selected for beta testing?Anonymous
November 17, 2005
I believe I read that Beta 2 will be the first build available to MSDN subscribers.Anonymous
November 17, 2005
Hmm, how did you pick and order the top 8 posts for "Why did we make a new UI for Office 12?"Anonymous
November 17, 2005
Does Microsoft purposely reduce the quality of some of their icons their beta software?Anonymous
November 17, 2005
Nathan:
No, but we have thousands of new icons being produced for Office 12. It takes several years to get them all through concept, design, and into the product. As a result, we usually don't finish until almost RTM.Anonymous
November 17, 2005
Are smart tags supported in Office 12? We hope so!Anonymous
November 17, 2005
Hooray! Now that Beta 1 is here, you can tell us what's under that file menu (nudge, nudge, wink, wink).Anonymous
November 18, 2005
Hi Jenson,
First, as a developer I've really enjoyed reading your blog so thank you! Can you shed any light on whether or not all these new UI features will become part of Windows Common Controls or something similar so that any application developer could leverage them?
Thanks
-SteveAnonymous
November 18, 2005
Steve:
We don't have anything specific to announce around that right now, although this does come up pretty frequently.Anonymous
November 18, 2005
Jensen,
Thanks very much for the reply! I've posted an entry on my blog that further explains my position and hopefully will help drive Microsoft to make what I feel is the right decision for all Windows software developers.
http://blogs.borland.com/stevet/archive/2005/11/18.aspx
-SteveAnonymous
November 18, 2005
The comment has been removedAnonymous
November 19, 2005
I also think it would be helpful to have the Office controls available. All the third-party controls that I buy now are written in managed code, so I would be happy if you released O12 controls that required .NET (only if it is .NET 2.0).
We develop applications that are used together with Office applications, so being able to make a consistent look-and-feel with Office improves the usability of the system. This is why having Office controls released adds value.Anonymous
November 19, 2005
Two words for Steve Trefethen: not likely.
Not even all Office 12 applications are getting this new UI. Would you realistically expect that it is made available for everyone to use?Anonymous
November 19, 2005
Too late now of course, but, IMHO, the new UI controls should have been developed as a common API right from the get-go. Then there is no problem making them available to everyone else - they are already there, to begin with.
Maybe next time!Anonymous
November 22, 2005
Now that Beta 1 is out, the first reviews have hit the street. The website WindowsAtoZ said:
"The only really big improvement to Word 12 is the ribbon menu at the top."
"As with Word 12, the only real change to Excel 12 is the interface."
Uh, they must not read this blog. Or David Gainer's. Or Eric Rucker's. My response is linked in my blog above.Anonymous
November 23, 2005
I don't see why these couldn't be made available in time for Vista/Longhorn myself. Vista hasn't even reached Beta 2 yet, so there's still time for a UI widget to be packed in.Anonymous
February 19, 2006
PingBack from http://jameslin.wordpress.com/2005/12/13/more-on-the-new-microsoft-office-ui/Anonymous
January 01, 2008
PingBack from http://music.247blogging.info/?p=4469Anonymous
May 26, 2009
PingBack from http://backyardshed.info/story.php?title=jensen-harris-an-office-user-interface-blog-beta-1-derful-the-top