Microsoft's Office App That Replaces Word, Excel, and PowerPoint Hits General Availability (venturebeat.com) 41
Microsoft today launched Office for Android and iOS in general availability. The unified app means you no longer need to download, install, and switch between the individual Word, Excel, and PowerPoint apps. From a report: The company today also announced new features coming to the app this spring: Word Dictation, Excel Cards View, and Outline to PowerPoint. You can use Office for free, and if you sign in with a Microsoft Account or connect a third-party storage service you can access and store documents in the cloud. Microsoft has over 200 million monthly active Office 365 business users and over 37 million Office 365 consumer subscribers. When the company launched the new Office mobile app as a public preview in November, "tens of thousands of people" rushed to try it. Microsoft has found that most users and businesses want to use the Office app as a hub or starting point for all their document work.
Re: (Score:1)
Still waiting for yearly updates on my Mike Rowe Soft programs.
MS App (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Whilst I frequently died just a little when forced to use an MS app. Most unintuitive pile of rat droppings to little the software world.
Outlook (Score:2)
To be honest, the only app I have used was outlook which garnered positive reviews on launch.
Clearly not enough of these reviewers had ever used Android or the weath of great email apps that show how poor Microsoft's offering was.
Been bitten too many times
Re: (Score:2)
A nice move (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Average Joe is giving up their data. They're not the customer they're the product. Be it internal use, 3rd party sales, or something. Microsoft isn't doing this out of the goodness of their hearts.
Nice for casual use (Score:4)
Third party support for Office file formats gets better every year, but there's always that one time it gets it wrong and you look like an idiot for it. Having some kind of gratis option for casual use is actually pretty nice.
why (Score:3)
Explain why I would want to load and boot up 3 or 4 apps' worth of RAM just to run one of them. What is the point here, other than requiring more clicks to get to where I want to be?
Now: click on the Word icon. Start typing.
This New Thing: click on something. Get some dumbass menu or splash page. Figure out what is the word processor. Click on that.
Re: (Score:2)
That’s my question too - can someone explain the supposed advantage of this approach?
Re: (Score:3)
Because switching between apps on Android or iOS generally sucks? Just because you can do it, doesn't make it necessarily fun, especially if the OS unloaded the app midway through and now you have to sit through the startup. Given the high level of integration present (you want to include Excel tables and charts into PowerPoint or Word being the most common things to do) this could get annoying. Whereas if I wanted
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
64GB of DDR4 RAM is $250
Microsoft word uses 45.1MB of RAM.
Excel uses 69.5MB of RAM
Powerpoint uses 51.5MB of RAM.
That's on average ~100MB of extra RAM being used by loading all 3. (And probably most of that is redundant libraries in each executable but we'll ignore that...)
$250 / 64,000 = 0.3c / MB * 100MB = 30cents.
Explain to me why you're so poor that you can't afford 30 cents of RAM?
Re: why (Score:2)
64 gb of ram in a mobile device is 250$? Are you perhaps confusing ram with storage?
Microsoft apps for Android and iOS (Score:2)
Libre Office [libreoffice.org]
Open source Resources [opensource.com]
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:1)
"LibreOffice Viewer for Android. The Document Foundation provides a LibreOffice Viewer for Android. It is available for download on Google Play. Editing is still an experimental feature which has to be enabled separately in the settings, and is not stable enough for mission critical tasks."
Re: (Score:2)
https://wiki.documentfoundatio... [documentfoundation.org]
It's all beta at the moment but slowly getting there...
https://play.google.com/store/... [google.com]
Re: (Score:2)
There is WPS Office for Android and iOS (in addition to Windows, Mac and Linux).
https://www.wps.com/office/and... [wps.com]
https://www.wps.com/office/ios... [wps.com]
http://linux.wps.com/ [wps.com]
Gauntlet thrown Apple! (Score:2)
Bring back Appleworks!
Re: (Score:2)
It's called iWork. It's 17 years old.
Re: (Score:2)
You kids and your new fangled gadgets.
They should name it Microsoft Works (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Office as an "app"? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Not Office, but I've used Google Docs on my cell phone to do my writing. I can add to my novels/novellas no matter where I am. On a line waiting to place an order? Write a few paragraphs. Sitting in the passenger seat while someone else drives? Write some more. Waiting for my child to get done with an activity where all I need to do otherwise is stand around? More writing.
Of course, when it's time for publication, I take that writing and use a real word processor to double-check it and format it, but the ab
Re: (Score:2)
Keep them separate (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Desktop OSs don't allow you to have multiple instances of the same app running either. What they do actually allow is for you to have multiple windows open at the same time.
The tiger changes its stripes? (Score:2)
You can use Office for free
Wow. It wasn't so many years ago that Microsoft was "discounting" Windows so that they could milk their money from the Office cash cow. Are our personal data and usage habits worth so much more to them that Windows and Office can now be free?
Re: (Score:2)
You can use Office for free
Wow. It wasn't so many years ago that Microsoft was "discounting" Windows so that they could milk their money from the Office cash cow. Are our personal data and usage habits worth so much more to them that Windows and Office can now be free?
I don't think it's quite that. I think that MS is beginning to see the writing on the wall. A generation of kids is growing up on Chromebooks, where e-mail, documents, spreadsheets, and presentations are all free*. Even if they're not immersed in the Googlesphere early on, there are 101 Word/Excel/Powerpoint clones on iOS and Android, most of which are either free* or some $10-$20.
MS might be able to keep afloat by milking businesses in the same way Oracle does, but like they learned with Windows, when you'
Re: (Score:2)