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Microsoft Office Web Apps For iPad A Game Changer

Comments | Todd Ogasawara, BYTE | August 23, 2012 02:10 PM

Category: Tablets

Ask people which productivity app they would most like to have on their iPad, and most would probably say Microsoft Word, followed by Microsoft Excel. In other words, Microsoft Office. This week, after nearly a year of rumors of Microsoft Office for the iPad, Microsoft finally delivered. A touch-friendly version of Office Web Apps is now available.

Do the touch-enabled Web app versions of Microsoft Office live up to expectations? As a daily user of Microsoft Office Web Apps on a notebook PC I was eager to find out. I tried the big three Office apps: Word, Excel, and PowerPoint. I used the Safari browser with my iPad, but Microsoft Office Web Apps also work with the touch-friendly Internet Explorer browser in Windows 8. These Web apps have some limitations, but their convenience, compatibility with Microsoft Office for the desktop, and overall impressive functionality more than made up for the problems.

To access the apps, head over to http://skydrive.com, which will redirect you to skydrive.live.com. Assuming you have a Microsoft Live account and have opted in to the SkyDrive service, you will see a tiled set of images representing your SkyDrive cloud storage contents. I opted to view my files and folders in a traditional detailed list view, seen in the screenshot below.

The first thing I did was create a new Microsoft Word document (below). If you have used Microsoft Office Web Apps in your desktop browser, you'll find that the look of these refreshed Web apps matches that of the flatter graphical look of the upcoming Microsoft Office 2013 release for desktops. At the same time icons and menu items are spaced for touch friendliness.

Beware there is still one huge difference between Microsoft Office Web Apps and Google Docs: Google Docs saves data in your documents as you work. Microsoft Office Web Apps, whether used on the desktop or iPad, require manual saves. One effect of this difference is that it can take what seems like a long time--more than a few seconds--to open and save documents. The good news is that as long as you have a network connection, Office Web Apps will prompt you before exiting if you have not saved a modified document.

The Microsoft Excel Web app (below) is hands down the best Web-based spreadsheet available for the iPad. It is much better than the Google Drive (formerly Docs) spreadsheet for one simple reason: You can move from cell to cell and row to row just as you do in the desktop version. It does not have Google Drive's terrible single-row editing.

This Web-based Office solution is not, however, perfect. Large Word documents or Excel spreadsheets are almost unmanageable when used on the iPad in the Safari mobile browser. To be fair, this is also the case when using Internet Explorer on a desktop or notebook computer. A Web browser is simply not yet the optimum vehicle for heavy work. The spreadsheet in the screenshot below contains several thousand rows consisting of numbers and text. Attempting to move around the spreadsheet was an exercise in futility.

PowerPoint in Office Web Apps was the most problematic of the big three Office components. (I did not test OneNote because Microsoft has had a native iPad app for some time.) Editing title boxes was difficult and the entire Safari browser crashed at one point. I also encountered a vague error message (see below).

Eventually, however, I was able to edit, save, and reopen for viewing a slidedeck (below) created with the PowerPoint Web app.

It's important to remember that these Office apps are accessed over the Internet so naturally they require a network connection. Don't expect to use them in a meeting where you don't have access to Wi-Fi or a 3G/4G cellular network. Despite this limitation and the problem with big documents, Microsoft Office Web Apps for the iPad is a game changer. It finally brings Microsoft Office to the iPad, including the first useable Web-based spreadsheet. When your documents are big, you can copy them from SkyDrive to a PC or Mac and use the full desktop Microsoft Office applications for more demanding formatting or calculation work.

Name: Microsoft Office Web Apps

Price: Free

Microsoft Office Web Apps adds touch capabilities to Web-based versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote for iPad and Windows 8 mobile Web browsers. The Excel app is especially impressive--it's the first Web-based spreadsheet that gives you cell-to-cell navigation comparable to the desktop application's.

Pro:

  • Free.
  • Highly functional Web versions of Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote.
  • Near-seamless compatibility with Microsoft Office 2010 and 2013 counterparts.
  • 7GB of free SkyDrive cloud storage (25GB if your account is grandfathered to the previous release's storage limit).

Con:

  • Must have access to the Internet via Wi-Fi or 3G/4G.
  • Large documents almost impossible to handle.
  • Does not support Android tablets.

Todd Ogasawara is a Contributing Editor for BYTE.

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