Office 2010 to Make Itself Faster With Your GPU

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joytech22

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Well i don't normally use Word for graphical presentations but i guess it's good for anybody looking for a nice speedup when you have a bunch of things in the doc.
 

Bolbi

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[citation][nom]TunaSoda[/nom]As long as we can disable it[/citation]
Um, why? It's not like you're going to need that GPU for anything that can't spare a little processing power at the the same time that you're putting together a presentation.
 

figgus

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Is it just me, or does it look like they are trying to square off with Adobe? Half that feature list seems to be a new market segment for Office.

EDIT: Not sure why I got a thumbs down, but at what point did MS start dealing with graphic editing tools more sophisticated than paint? Admittedly, we still use 2k3 where I work, but there is no real editing of images in there. Mostly resizing and whatnot just to jam it into a PowerPoint. Traditionally, most graphic work has been Adobe's turf..
 
It's pretty obvious some of you don't use Microsoft Office in an office or professional environment. I am already thinking of ways I can jazz up my next presentation. They should have been implementing some kind of acceleration years ago.
 

Godfail

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[citation][nom]shin0bi272[/nom]Or you can keep your version of office that you already have and buy an SSD "It is the same price" - Ron White[/citation]

Or you can keep your current drive and buy some drugs and hookers.
 

jhansonxi

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[citation][nom]joytech22[/nom]Well i don't normally use Word for graphical presentations but i guess it's good for anybody looking for a nice speedup when you have a bunch of things in the doc.[/citation]Are you kidding? Since when does a word processor need GPU acceleration? Is Office that inefficient? I can see MAYBE needing GPU number-crunching in a HUGE spreadsheet but if you're doing that kind of analysis then it's probably the wrong application for the job.
 
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Now useless douches from Marketing can run their retarded PowerPoint transitions at TWICE the speed!
 
[citation][nom]jhansonxi[/nom]Are you kidding? Since when does a word processor need GPU acceleration? Is Office that inefficient? I can see MAYBE needing GPU number-crunching in a HUGE spreadsheet but if you're doing that kind of analysis then it's probably the wrong application for the job.[/citation]

The acceleration they are talking about is certain video and picture rendering that used to be all done with the CPU they decided to start accessing you GPU's power. Now how much will this speed it up probably nothing noticeable on anything with a core 2 processor and up.

It really just sounds to me like they are trying to find a reason to make people think they need to upgrade to office 2010 when in reality not much has changed.
 

feeddagoat

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Ill believe it when I see it. When I use office I use it to prepare a presentation, do a report, produce graphs and tables, show me where in the last 10 or so years that office has needed more power from dual core or GPU acceleration. Its just more marketing gimmiks to try and get you to drop a stupid amount of money on something you don't need. Since office "changed" I've jumped ship to open office due to lectures doing documents in Docx which olderversions didn't support. Plus office only has two installs and it throws out random formatting errors between older versions. I don't see the point in spashing £70+ on software when open office IMO is better and free.
 

Godfail

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[citation][nom]SAAIELLO[/nom]The acceleration they are talking about is certain video and picture rendering that used to be all done with the CPU they decided to start accessing you GPU's power. Now how much will this speed it up probably nothing noticeable on anything with a core 2 processor and up.It really just sounds to me like they are trying to find a reason to make people think they need to upgrade to office 2010 when in reality not much has changed.[/citation]

How much REALLY changes between versions of Office? Aesthetically, 2010 is an upgrade. There are a lot of new tools that could make it worthwhile, the new printing menus for one. But you know, many enterprise customers can upgrade this for free as they pay year to year licensing.
 

theuerkorn

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... any time that the system can offload some of the work from the CPU onto the GPU (if it's better for the job) is a good thing.
While I get your point, it's obviously about balance and Office is unlikely to put the same strain on a system as your average game would. I mean, what's the point of GPU if the CPU sits idle. Of course, described new features (especially video editing) are very demanding applications which welcome the GPU support.
 

annymmo

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You people really need to think clearly.

Using a dedicated, specialized processor that can finish work 1000 (not exaggerated) times faster or 1000 times more work in the same time.
While offloading a bunch of work from the main processor, is a very good thing. It's a much bigger improvement then that ribbon UI thing ever will be, ribbon is introduced in MS Office 2007.

Haven't you noticed the new stuff: animations, effects.
Most of those things just ARE NOT POSSIBLE on Cpu's.

There is also something called DirectWrite for rendering characters, text with GPU.
Probably also useful for word processors don't you think.
MS Office should make every visible, visual thing GPU-rendered/accelerated.

This can make MS Office very fast, responsive with large workloads.

This should have been done a long time ago.
From an engineering standpoint it's much more efficient.
 

figgus

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[citation][nom]annymmo[/nom]You people really need to think clearly. Using a dedicated, specialized processor that can finish work 1000 (not exaggerated) times faster or 1000 times more work in the same time. While offloading a bunch of work from the main processor, is a very good thing. It's a much bigger improvement then that ribbon UI thing ever will be, ribbon is introduced in MS Office 2007. Haven't you noticed the new stuff: animations, effects. Most of those things just ARE NOT POSSIBLE on Cpu's. There is also something called DirectWrite for rendering characters, text with GPU. Probably also useful for word processors don't you think. MS Office should make every visible, visual thing GPU-rendered/accelerated. This can make MS Office very fast, responsive with large workloads. This should have been done a long time ago. From an engineering standpoint it's much more efficient.[/citation]

And when you send this new jazzed up document to a client with a traditional business PC they can't open it properly.

It might be more efficient from an engineering standpoint, but from an interoperability IT standpoint it is blazingly stupid.
 

sbnathanson

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Oh great, now all new GPU reviews or announcements are going to have the obligatory comment: "Yeah, but can it accellerate Office 2010?"
 

bogcotton

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Great!

Sometimes when I'm typing up a meaty story, with spellcheck on, and I use a powerful adjective I get a slight stutter as my framerate drops under 30FPS. Good to see they are doing something about this.
 

Regulas

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All this tells me is that MS Office is so bloated it needs additional horsepower to get running in a snappy fashion. Sorry MS I will never fork over money for your Office Suit. Open Office does just fine and is supported on all three platforms, Linux, OS X and Windows.
 

Godfail

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[citation][nom]figgus[/nom]And when you send this new jazzed up document to a client with a traditional business PC they can't open it properly.It might be more efficient from an engineering standpoint, but from an interoperability IT standpoint it is blazingly stupid.[/citation]

Actually, you're assuming way too much. The GPU functionality seems to only apply to the document creation aspects - not the readability of the document. It's blazingly stupid to then take those assumptions and start speculating on interoperability without any more knowledge, FYI.
 

TomD_1

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[citation][nom]sbnathanson[/nom]Oh great, now all new GPU reviews or announcements are going to have the obligatory comment: "Yeah, but can it accellerate Office 2010?"[/citation]

Shhh.. Don't give them any ideas
 
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