Microsoft to launch the new Office


Microsoft to launch the new Office commercially on January 29


There have been lots of rumors that January 29 would be the day that the latest version of Office would be generally available via retail channels. But thanks to a tweet from the Office team, and a #Timeto365 campaign/hashtag -- which I saw via Winbeta.org -- we now know Microsoft is "launching" the new Office on Tuesday in Bryant Park, New York. (Thanks for the heads up, guys! Luckily, I live within walking distance.)



Microsoft released Office 2013 to manufacturing on October 11, 2012. The company made the final bits available to MSDN and TechNet subscribers, as well as volume-licensing customers, before the end of last year. Recently, Microsoft made $10 versions of the final Office 2013 bits available to volume licensees with Software Assurance as part of its Home Use Program.
Microsoft officials have been saying for a couple of months that Redmond planned to make the final bits commercially available in the first calendar quarter of 2013.
Microsoft already has taken the wraps off some of its Office 2013 SKUs. The company will be pushing a new, subscription-centric version of Office that it (confusingly) has named Office 365 Home Premium. I say confusingly because, unlike the other Office 365 SKUs, the Home Premium version isn't a Microsoft-hosted version of Office. Instead, it's downloadable, locally installable versions of the Office 2013 products for which users will be charged a monthly or annual "rental" fee. For that subscription fee, users will have the right to install Office 2013 and/or the Office for Mac 2011 SKUs on up to five PCs and Macs in total. (There's still no new word on what's going on with the follow-on version of Office for Mac 2011.)
Microsoft officials also have said that the "real" Office 365 update should be available around the time of the client launch. Microsoft officials have been prepping the company's reseller/integrator partners for the Office 365 refresh for the past couple of weeks.
When I asked in December 2012 for the status of the rollout of the new Office, I was told a company spokesperson: "Any of the new Office 365 SKUs don’t become available for purchase until first quarter of 2013. " That said, some Office 365 Enterprise customers have been able to get the latest bits as part of Microsoft's regular service updates, starting in October 2012 and continuing through general availability, the spokesperson added.
Here's the new Office 2013 and Office 365 packaging and pricing information that Microsoft has shared with partners to date. Office 365 Home Premium will cost $8.33 per user per month (or roughly $100 a year).  Office 2013 Home & Student will cost $139 for a one-time purchase and use on a single PC. Home & Business 2013 will cost $219 for use on a single PC.
Summary: Finally, an official confirmation. Microsoft is launching the new Office, a k a Office 2013, on January 29.

AMD's 'Richland' APU clock speeds detailed


Last week, a Chinese website posted information that allegedly detailed AMD's new "Richland" processor. Now, tech site VR-Zone claims to have the clock speeds for each of the models.
"Richland" APUs are based on an updated Trinity architecture, and are built using the same 32-nanometer process and Piledriver CPU architecture. However, they differ from Trinity parts by having higher clock speeds, featuring updated Radeon HD 8000 series GPUs, and faster DDR3-2133MHz dual-channel memory controllers.
The published details for six APUs include:
Model Cores CPU Clock
(base/turbo)
GHz
GPU GPU clock
MHz
TDP
W
A10-6800K 4 4.1/4.4 HD 8670D 844 100
A10-6700 4 3.7/4.3 HD 8670D 844 65
A8-6600K 4 3.9/4.2 HD 8570D 844 100
A8-6500 4 3.5/4.1 HD 8570D 800 65
A6-6400K 2 3.9/4.1 HD 8470D 800 65
A4-6300 2 3.7/3.9 HD 8370D 760 65
The "K" suffix on the parts mean that the APU will come with unlocked CPU multipliers and GPU stream to unlock extreme overclocking.
Sources say that the new APUs are already shipping to OEMs, and that new PCs featuring "Richland" silicon are expected to make an appearance in the second quarter of this year.
 Summary: More details of AMD's upcoming "Richland" APUs, a follow to the Trinity A-series, have been leaked by a tech news site, giving us some possible speeds for the silicon.

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