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While most recent Redmond news has been focused on Windows 11 lately, Microsoft also released Office 2021.

Microsoft has made standalone versions of Office products available. The Office products are available with the Microsoft 365 subscription. Office Home and Student 2021 costs $149 and the Office Home and Business edition (which includes Outlook and Outlook, while the Home and Student version does not) is available for $249. More information on pricing and editions is available here.

As with every version of Office that Microsoft has ever released, office 2021 comes with lots of new features. I won't get into details on all the features because some of them aren't ones I'm using. However, there's lots to like about Microsoft Office 2021, and I wanted to write about some of the new features that caught my attention. Once you decide on a useful reference about office pakket, check out here.

Line Focus
This might seem like an odd thing to lead with However, one of my most loved new features is something called Line Focus. Line Focus isn't one of the things I could see myself using on a daily basis, but I think that it could assist me when I'm doing long writing sessions. Word will show only one line of text (or multiple lines, if you'd like) to focus your focus. This appears like in Figure 1.

Sometimes at the end of an extended day, the lines on a page all appear to blur when I attempt to read the words I wrote. Proofreading will be made easier by using the Line Focus feature.

Translator
A very exciting new feature is a translator for Outlook. The add-on can automatically translate messages written in languages other than English. As someone who receives emails from around the world, I am confident that this feature will prove useful.

Inking
Another thing I am very excited about with regard to Microsoft Office 2021 is that Microsoft has finally brought the ability to ink into Outlook. It means you will be able to use an inking device such as a Surface Pen or any other inking device (including your mouse or your finger) to mark up email messages.

I can't tell you how many times I've wanted to highlight something in an email or add an additional note (such as a due date, a phone number, or something similar).

Microsoft has upgraded the MS office applications with a pen toolbox. The toolbox for pen lets you select a pen, alter the pen's color or use an alternative drawing tool such as the eraser and the lasso. Both were available in PowerPoint for a while but are now part of Word.

Also, Microsoft has made it so that pen customizations are no longer able to roam from one device to the next. Although this may sound like a negative thing at first glance, it's actually a good change. I use inking differently on my Surface Book than I do on my desktop. So my pen setup that I have on one device isn't necessarily the ideal setup for a device of another kind.

Microsoft has also added ink replay in its Office apps. In PowerPoint for instance it implies that you can utilize prerecorded pen ink to mark up a live presentation.