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There's lots of data out there: LOTS. The digital universe is about eight hundred thousand petabytes (that's eight hundred million gigabytes). Your business is no doubt contriubting to that number and needs a way to work with it. PowerPivot is a free add-in for Excel that can link multiple spreadsheets or even link to databases. That means you can work with millions--emphasis on the "s"--of lines of data. Excel also has another tool to help you slice through data, which I'll tell you about in this short video. It's an excerpt from Envisioning the future, my behind the scenes look at the Office Future Vision video.
Download PowerPivot for Excel now. Or learn about Slicers, new to Excel 2010.
--Doug Thomas
Comments: (3) Collapse
You have a typo error below the video.
In your download link you typed PowerPoint instead of PowerPivot.
Thanks! It's fixed...but golly, there's a whole new product to think about...
I liked the heads up but was expecting a little more from the video. For instance a quick example how you linked up your sheets in the way you showed.
Still, thanks for the heads up but my data amounts are hardly enough to expand on it like this. But having said that, a small side-step if I may... Since beginning this week I started using Outlook 2010 (was using SeaMonkey's mail). Part of this decision was triggered by the 'Business Contact Management' extension; that critter is outrageous for small businesses like I represent.
I'm slowly, but steadily, starting to become -very- impressed with the way you can inter-exchange data between Office applications. A bit comparable like you showed here; one sheet easily connected to the other. In my case; accessing Outlook data (contacts) from Word (using VBA obviously).
Alas, thanks for sharing but.. - no offense - but I am looking forward to one of your "casual" example video's. Those really rock, I'm even actively (carefully) spreading them with some of my customers :-)
Comments: (loading) Collapse