try new office 2010

Office 2010 hit the shelves yesterday, and Office remains a not-cheap money maker for Microsoft. Here's a reminder of how you can try out any version of Office 2010 free for 60 days—and then, with software, maybe more.
We've been peeking at, poking around, and taking screenshots of Office 2010 since it started showing up on the web, legitimate release and otherwise. After a hands-on look, a Q&A about whether it's worth an Office upgrade, a showdown of Office Web Apps versus Google Docs, and even a comparison of Office to its own Web Apps, it's pretty much up to you, the license buyer, to determine if Office 2010 is worth the full freight.
Try Out Microsoft Office 2010 Free for 60 Days (and Beyond)
Luckily, those in the U.S. and U.S. territories can grab a free trial product key at the link below, good for 60 days of free use. After those 60 days—or 30 days with a standard, installed-but-not-licensed copy—you'll start getting nagged and shut down on without a registration. This trial extender software can give you up to six 30-day reprieves, or "rearms," as we've previously mentioned.
Grab the trial, keep it running, and decide for yourself. What have you thought of Office 2010 so far, now that you've had a chance to kick the tires a bit?

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