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Microsoft Releases Word, Excel and PowerPoint Apps For Android Smartphones

         

engine

4:53 pm on Jun 24, 2015 (gmt 0)

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The preview was only a few weeks ago, but the new apps of Word, PowerPoint, and Excel are ready for release.

PowerPoint for Android is an interesting addition as I could have used that only the other day.

Today I’m pleased to announce the general availability of the new Word, Excel and PowerPoint apps for Android phone. These join our previously released Office apps for Android tablets to complete the Office experience for the millions of Android users around the world. Microsoft Releases Word, Excel and PowerPoint Apps For Android Smartphones [blogs.office.com]

creeking

6:30 pm on Jun 24, 2015 (gmt 0)

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looks like these are free.

(surprised)

lucy24

7:58 pm on Jun 24, 2015 (gmt 0)

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Paying money for a word processor intended for use on a telephone seems a bit over the top. But then, I went through college on an L. C. Smith manual. Pets walking across the keyboard would have had no effect whatsoever.

bill

5:25 am on Jun 25, 2015 (gmt 0)

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In the corporate world I'm seeing more people attending meetings with tablets, so the addition of Microsoft Office products is certainly becoming a necessity for some. You probably won't be composing much on a tablet or phone, but it's good to be able to access or display those files.

Don't get me started about pets getting stuck in manual typewriter keys...

engine

7:56 am on Jun 25, 2015 (gmt 0)

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Oh, i wouldn't ever try and create detailed documents on my phone, but, because MS is the standard in the corporate world, when they send a file, I need to be able to, at the very least, read it without having to convert it to something else. If I do return the amended document, I need to send it back with the MS compatibility. I know, there are open source programs, converters, and online versions out there, but, really, they do not have the full compatibility required and formatting gets lost.

creeking

9:45 am on Jun 25, 2015 (gmt 0)

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this might be enough reason to buy a cheap tablet - one with a keyboard

my small laptop has an 11.6 inch screen, too large to qualify for the free software.

if someone needed to learn to use excel/powerpoint/word, this software on a tablet might do the trick. watch video tutorials on your home desktop, and practice on the tablet.


fwiw, the website says the free software provides the "core experience" ................... the full experience comes with an office 365 subscription

engine

4:44 pm on Jun 25, 2015 (gmt 0)

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the full experience comes with an office 365 subscription


That's fair enough. The app is only going to be a cut down version of the real thing.

I tried the tablet version and it works fine, although it was a little difficult without a true keyboard. I've yet to try the smartphone version.

Fotiman

6:11 pm on Jun 25, 2015 (gmt 0)

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Probably helpful if you also have speech-to-text capabilities (many smartphones do).

lucy24

6:29 pm on Jun 25, 2015 (gmt 0)

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when they send a file, I need to be able to, at the very least, read it without having to convert it to something else

Hm, right, reading other people's content. On my desktop, .doc files open in TextEdit (the built-in text editor / word processor that I never intentionally use); it seems to be able to approximate the formatting at least as far as displaying tables and similar.

Mobiles tend to be snarky about letting you save files; you can't just drag stuff onto the desktop. Exasperating if, like me, you're in the habit of reading html locally. Does everything behave differently once it's a known filetype?