Although Office 365 Home Premium might also
sound like a great deal for a small business, it's not licensed for commercial
use (Like the Windows RT versions of Office 2013) unless you already have an
Office business licence. Instead, you need one of the Office 365 business subscriptions.
These include the new Office 2013 versions of
Exchange, SharePoint and Lync Online, which are already available to run on
your own servers. It's taking some time for Microsoft to upgrade Office 365 to
run these new server versions, which explains the later availability (there are
a number of issues in SharePoint the Office 365 team is working on). We've
tried these out with the Office 2013 applications (and we looked at SharePoint
Online 2013 in more detail here).
If you're looking for five or more copies of
Office 2013 and you don't want the Office 365 services at all, you can buy
Office Standard 2013 (with Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote, Outlook with Business
Contact Manager, Publisher, the Office Web Apps and limited Lync, SharePoint
and rights management services) or Office Professional Plus 2013 (with the full
range of desktop Office programs and server features) through volume licensing.
We've already looked at the final (RTM) version
of the Office 2013 applications. Now we've been able to try out the Office 365
Home Premium service with the new Office.com site, where you can download some
of the new Office apps (although the apps for Outlook won't work until you have
Exchange 2013).
Click The Below Link To Download:
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