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Showing posts with label Excel News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Excel News. Show all posts

Excel Makes Better Predictions in Office 2016

Microsoft revamps the software's forecasting features, enabling users to fine-tune their business predictions.




Excel 2016, part of Microsoft's newly released Office 2016 productivity software suite, has new built-in tools to help users peer a little further into the future.
Data forecasting is not new to Excel. Before the new version, "many used the FORECAST() sheet function, which performs a linear forecast or extended trendlines in chart properties to extrapolate forward," reminded Microsoft's Excel team in an Office Blogs post.

Office 2016 for Mac update doesn't include fix for crashes under OS X El Capitan - Computer World



Microsoft on Tuesday updated Office 2016 for Mac with Security patches and a host of smaller Changes feature, but did not fix the problem users constant-crash on OS X Have Reported El Capitan, Apple's newest operating system.


Crash Report for Office 2016
Source (computerworld.com/article/2992488)

Instead, the company Told customers to sit tight and wait for Apple to ship an update for El Capitan, aka OS X 10.11, Strongly suggesting the mess That was Apple's Responsibility.


Excel 30 Years - The History of Excellence!



Product legendary Microsoft Office, which is used today by more than one million people worldwide, was created in 1985 to ... Apple



Microsoft's Excel Might Be The Most Dangerous Software On The Planet


I am sharing the very interested article regarding the Microsoft Excel. This article written by Tim Worstall and published in Feb 13, 2013 in Forbes.com. 




No, really, it’s possible that Microsoft‘s Excel is the most dangerous software on the planet. Yes, more dangerous than rogue code running a nuclear power plant, than the Stuxnet that was deliberately sent off to sabotage Iran‘s nuclear program, worse, even, than whatever rent in the fabric of space time led to the invention of Lolcats. Really, that serious.

There’s a danger at one level: it’s all become so complex and it’s handled in such a slapdash manner that no one is really on top of it anymore. And don’t just take it from me as an assertion, there are very serious people indeed warning about this:

Both the Switzerland-based Basel Committee on Banking Supervision1 (BCBS) and the Financial Services Authority2 (FSA) in the UK have recently made it clear that when relying on manual processes, desktop applications or key internal data flow systems such as spreadsheets, banks and insurers should have effective controls in place that are consistently applied to manage risks around incorrect, false or even fraudulent data. The citation by the BCBS is the first time that spreadsheet management has ever been specifically referenced at such a high level, a watermark in the approach to spreadsheet risk.

To give you and idea of how important this is here’s a great tale from James Kwak:

The issue is described in the appendix to JPMorgan’s internal investigative task force’s report. To summarize: JPMorgan’s Chief Investment Office needed a new value-at-risk (VaR) model for the synthetic credit portfolio (the one that blew up) and assigned a quantitative whiz (“a London-based quantitative expert, mathematician and model developer” who previously worked at a company that built analytical models) to create it. The new model “operated through a series of Excel spreadsheets, which had to be completed manually, by a process of copying and pasting data from one spreadsheet to another.” The internal Model Review Group identified this problem as well as a few others, but approved the model, while saying that it should be automated and another significant flaw should be fixed.** After the London Whale trade blew up, the Model Review Group discovered that the model had not been automated and found several other errors. Most spectacularly,

“After subtracting the old rate from the new rate, the spreadsheet divided by their sum instead of their average, as the modeler had intended. This error likely had the effect of muting volatility by a factor of two and of lowering the VaR . . .”


To translate that into the vernacular, the bank, JP Morgan, was running huge bets (tens of billions of dollars, what we might think of a golly gee gosh that’s a lot of money) in London. The way they were checking what they were doing was playing around in Excel. And not even in the Masters of the Universe style that we might hope, all integrated, automated and self-checking, but by cutting and pasting from one spreadsheet to another. And yes, they got one of the equations wrong as a result of which the bank lost several billion dollars (perhaps we might drop the gee here but it’s still golly gosh that’s a lot of money).

And the various financial market regulators are rather waking up to how these decisions are being made in the markets. And thus the warning at the top: guys, do you think you could pay a little more attention to the tools you are using to move these billions and tens of billions around? For as we can see getting it wrong can be painfully expensive.


So that’s one sense in which Excel could be dangerous: that we’ve tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands, of financiers and bankers throwing trillions of dollars around the markets on the basis of their incomplete spreadsheets and their ignorance of how they’re doing it wrong. Pretty scary really.

But there’s another deeper level of risk here. That very throwing of trillions a day around the markets (and it really is trillions a day: the foreign exchange market in London alone is over $2 trillion a day) is dependent upon the existence of Excel itself.

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