Microsoft Office for iPad launches today, requires Office 365 subscription for editing
Microsoft on Thursday unveiled a long-awaited version of its Office suite for iPad, bringing productivity applications Word, Excel and PowerPoint to Apple's tablet lineup, requiring users to subscribe to its Office 365 service for editing documents.
Microsoft was quick to emphasize at a media event in San Francisco on Thursday that the new Office for iPad was built from the ground up for Apple's platform. They showcased how documents can be synced to Microsoft's OneDrive cloud service.
Office for iPad will use what Microsoft referred to as a "freemium model," allowing users to install the app view documents, but requiring a subscription to Office 365 to make edits.
A Thursday's event, Microsoft showed off Word, Excel and PowerPoint, all of which feature the company's trademark "ribbon" menu. Selecting items on the menu will pop up various options for styling and formatting.
The apps also integrate with one another, as Microsoft showed how an Excel chart can be brought into Word for formatting on charts and images. Excel also features sparkline graphs and a custom keyboard for entering numbers.
PowerPoint for iPad features transitions and animations between slides, while users can touch and hold on the screen to get a "laser pointer" type of dot on the screen while presenting.
Office for iPad is more full featured than its iPhone counterpart, and Microsoft has pledged full file support with the desktop versions of Office available for both Windows and Mac.
An Office 365 Home Premium subscription required for editing documents runs $99.99 for a full year commitment or $9.99 per month, and allows access on up to five PCs and Macs. Student subscriptions are also available for $79.99 for four years, and are accessible on up to two PCs and Macs. For enterprise users, small business plans start at $5 per user, per month, but access to the desktop versions of Office start at $12.50 per month.
Microsoft was quick to emphasize at a media event in San Francisco on Thursday that the new Office for iPad was built from the ground up for Apple's platform. They showcased how documents can be synced to Microsoft's OneDrive cloud service.
Office for iPad will use what Microsoft referred to as a "freemium model," allowing users to install the app view documents, but requiring a subscription to Office 365 to make edits.
A Thursday's event, Microsoft showed off Word, Excel and PowerPoint, all of which feature the company's trademark "ribbon" menu. Selecting items on the menu will pop up various options for styling and formatting.
The apps also integrate with one another, as Microsoft showed how an Excel chart can be brought into Word for formatting on charts and images. Excel also features sparkline graphs and a custom keyboard for entering numbers.
PowerPoint for iPad features transitions and animations between slides, while users can touch and hold on the screen to get a "laser pointer" type of dot on the screen while presenting.
Office for iPad is more full featured than its iPhone counterpart, and Microsoft has pledged full file support with the desktop versions of Office available for both Windows and Mac.
An Office 365 Home Premium subscription required for editing documents runs $99.99 for a full year commitment or $9.99 per month, and allows access on up to five PCs and Macs. Student subscriptions are also available for $79.99 for four years, and are accessible on up to two PCs and Macs. For enterprise users, small business plans start at $5 per user, per month, but access to the desktop versions of Office start at $12.50 per month.
Comments
So I have to 'pay' to edit documents? - might as well stick with iWorks then.
Good move Microsoft. Make people pay for something they have already found ways to do without.
I'm really pleased about this. I could just about get away with only taking an iPad with me when I travel, but for the fact that Numbers just doesn't meet my needs in the way Excel does (and, of course, Excel is pretty much the "standard" where I work).
Now, if they would just improve Excel for Mac, to make it use multi-core processors, that would be a huge bonus too!
Interesting move! I didn't know that Apple allows such things.
Wow, an attractive woman introducing a new Microsoft product and not sweat-soaked Ballmer running around the stage screaming like an unhinged orangutan???
**head explodes**
I wonder if women (or gay men for that matter) feel the need to comment on the attractiveness or otherwise of Mark Zuckerberg, Tim Cook et al when they do product introductions?
The tech world has a long way to go with its treatment of women.......
I wonder if women (or gay men for that matter) feel the need to comment on the attractiveness or otherwise of Mark Zuckerberg, Tim Cook et al when they do product introductions?
The tech world has a long way to go with its treatment of women.......
If I were a woman (which I'm not), I'd much rather see an attractive man present a new product than Crazy Uncle Ballmer.
As a man, I'd much rather see an attractive woman present a new product than Crazy Uncle Ballmer.
Also, as a man, I'd much rather see an attractive man present a new product than Crazy Uncle Ballmer.
I hope we're not going to turn this into a giant debate about sexism because someone called someone else attractive?
So I have to 'pay' to edit documents? - might as well stick with iWorks then.
It's called 'iWork' and that would still be the case even if it were Free.
Notice they didnt reveal an Android version, and likely never will.
This sucks. I'd like to have Office on my iPad / iPhone, but I'm not about to spend money every month in order to have the "honor" of editing documents. They will not have my sale. Give me a fixed price and it's mine to use. Subscription-based software for something that is still a very core item for the enterprise is just not cool.
Thanks, but no thanks. I'll stick with my Office 2010 (Windows) and Office 2011 (Mac) for the very long foreseeable future. Microsoft is really shooting itself in the foot with this. It's no wonder their bread-and-butter software (Windows 8, Office 365) is on the decline.
Relax Paul. They comment about women in tech because they are as elusive as unicorns.
I really hope that this stupidity flops for Microsoft. It wouldn't take much more than a couple of years to waste a lot of money with this garbage. In a nut shell $99 a year is a ripoff for software.
"The first hit of crack is free"
Microsoft always loves the "subscription model" where they get those regular monthly or annual payments to keep there hooks into and get that regular revenue stream. They are not the only company that thinks that way - it has become very popular.
Personally I don't want a product that requires me to put all my documents up in "the Cloud" on someone else's servers. It seems harder and harder to find tools that do not require you to be "connected" and give someone else all your data.
Not interested.
I hope rather that I'm wrong and they've finally figured out cross-platform.