Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Legacy Archives

Microsoft introduces ‘try before you buy’ Office for Macs

Add as a preferred source on Google

free trialMicrosoft and Apple products in general aren’t generally thought of as compatible, but Microsoft Office for Mac just upped its appeal. The manufacturer will now offer a 30-day free trial of the software for Mac computers that can be conveniently found on Microsoft’s Office website. Apple computers will be eligible starting next week, just in time for the MacWorld Expo.

Prior to this offer, Mac users would either have to take the expensive plunge and purchase Office, or visit a retailer with the software to demo it out in store.

Recommended Videos

It seems a little late coming, seeing as the Mac App Store and Open Office provide a host of free choices, but the productivity tools of Office 2011 are hard to beat. Anyone who needs access to PowerPoint or Outlook even minimally is likely inclined to purchase the suite – but now can put it off for a month.

According to Cult of Mac, the download requires an Intel-based Mac with an extra 2.5GB of space lying around.

Microsoft Office has done generally well with Office for Mac, surpassing internal company milestones. But compared with Office for PC, it’s a drop in the bucket – Office 2010 was a monumental success for the company, besting past sales of the software. At the moment, Office for Mac is only available as a bundled package that includes Word, Powerpoint, Excel, and Outlook, and there hasn’t been any indication Microsoft will sell software individually. But Microsoft is clearly open to collaborating with Apple, and just last week launched the OneNote Office app for the iPhone.

Molly McHugh
Former Social Media/Web Editor
Before coming to Digital Trends, Molly worked as a freelance writer, occasional photographer, and general technical lackey…
Adobe Firefly AI is now live publicly, hoping you’ll talk to an AI and get work done
Firefly AI Assistant can to handle your entire creative workflow
adobe-firefly-ai-assitant-public-beta

Adobe just opened up the public beta for Firefly AI Assistant. It is a conversational AI agent that sits across your entire Creative Cloud suite and handles multi-step workflows on your behalf.

You just have to describe what you want, and the assistant will figure out which Adobe tools to use and in what order, including Photoshop, Lightroom, Premiere, Firefly, and others.

Read more
Meta’s latest outrageous deal is getting solar power beamed even at night from satellites
Meta's deal with Overview Energy isn't just about clean power. It's a preview of what keeping AI running sustainably at planetary scale is going to require.
Satellite by Starlink

Out of all the things Meta has ever been accused of, thinking small hasn’t been one of them. 

The company that owns the most popular social media and messaging platforms like Facebook, Instagram, Messenger, and WhatsApp, is now looking at beaming sunlight from space to the Earth’s surface for powering its AI data centers after dark (via TechCrunch). 

Read more
Intel Wildcat Lake chips cost a pretty penny, but tests show they can’t touch the MacBook Neo
Intel's fanless chips are here, but the price tag might make you cry.
Text, Credit Card, Number

Intel's Wildcat Lake is the company's attempt to go toe-to-toe with the Apple MacBook Neo. The chips are tiny, featuring two performance cores, four efficiency cores, and a mini integrated GPU, and they're efficient enough to run completely without a fan. 

That's a genuinely exciting proposition for a Widows user who wants a slim, quiet laptop, but doesn’t want to switch to a new operating system. But it’s not all moonlight and roses, as the new chipsets come with a big catch. 

Read more