Microsoft retools Office for touch screen, Web use

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Microsoft is selling a retooled version of its Office software to consumers as an online subscription service for the first time in an attempt to extend one of the company's key franchises beyond personal computers.
Tuesday's release comes six months after Microsoft previewed the new-look Office, which includes popular word processing, spreadsheets and email programs.
"This is a fundamental shift in our business that began a several years ago," Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer wrote in a blog post.
The revamped Office boasts touch controls, just like the redesigned version of the Windows operating system that Microsoft Corp. released three months ago. The company, which is based in Redmond, Wash., is trying to ensure that its products retain their appeal at a time when people increasingly rely on smartphones and tablet computers instead of PCs.
To tap into that trend, Microsoft is promoting Office 2013 as a program tailor made for using over the Internet. All information is automatically stored in Microsoft's data centers, allowing for access to the same material on multiple devices. The content also can be stored on the hard drives of devices.
Yet Microsoft still isn't trying to get Office on the largest number of devices possible. Office 2013 doesn't include an option that works on Apple Inc.'s iPhone and iPad or smartphones and tablets running the Android software made by Google Inc. That leaves out the majority of smartphones and tablets sold in the past two years.
Microsoft is offering Office 2013 in a $100 annual subscription package, called 365 Home Premium, which includes online access on up to five Windows devices or Apple's line of Mac computers.
The company believes Office 2013 is currently best suited for Windows devices, said Chris Schneider, Microsoft's senior public relations manager for Office. Microsoft is limiting Office's reach as it tries to grab a bigger piece of the mobile market with its own operating system for smartphones and tablets.
Office will still be sold under a one-time licensing fee that allows the software to be installed on a single machine. Prices for that option start at $140 and range up to $400. People who don't need the entire Office bundle can buy individual programs such as Word, Excel and Outlook for $109 apiece.
Office 2013 is the first overhaul of the software suite in three years.
The bundle of programs has become a staple on desktop and laptop computers, providing a rich vein of revenue for Microsoft.
The company has reaped most of its Office sales from licenses allowing buyers to install the suite of programs on individual machines, a very lucrative strategy. The Microsoft division anchored by Office generates about $24 billion in annual sales, accounting for nearly one-third of Microsoft's total revenue.
Revenue in the Office division fell from the previous year during the three months ending in December, partly because many prospective buyers have been awaiting the latest version.
Microsoft's stock dipped a penny to $27.90 in Tuesday's afternoon trading. The shares are stuck around the same price as when the company released Windows 8 to great fanfare three months ago. Meanwhile, the benchmark Standard & Poor's 500 has climbed by about 7 percent.
Besides getting access to the suite's programs, 365 Home Premium subscribers receive 20 additional gigabytes of storage on Microsoft's SkyDrive to supplement the 7 gigabytes that the company gives away to accountholders for free. Subscribers also will get 60 minutes of free international calls on Microsoft's Skype service for Internet phone calls and video chats.
College students and teachers will be able to buy Office 2013's online product for $80 for four years, which works out to about $1.67 per month. This option requires proof of student status. A variety of Office subscriptions are also being offered, with monthly fees ranging from $6 to $20 per user.
The online push reflects Microsoft's recognition that people want access to documents and email on whatever Internet-connected device they might have, wherever they may be, whether it's at work, home or a store while running errands.
"The technology needs to be able to move with you," Schneider said.
It's the first time that Microsoft has tried to persuade consumers that a recurring online subscription is the best way to buy and use Office. Microsoft had previously sold online Office subscriptions primarily to small businesses.
"Over time, the majority of the billion plus people using Office will be using the Office 365 service," Ballmer predicted in his blog post.
The attempt to sell online Office subscription to consumers comes nearly seven years after Google unveiled its own Internet bundle of word processing, spreadsheet and email programs. Google gives away a basic version of those applications, and charges subscriptions for more sophisticated packages aimed primarily at small businesses.
Microsoft's decision to reshape Office into an online service makes sense, although it may take customers a while to embrace the concept, said Edward Jones analyst Josh Olson. He suspects major companies that rely on Office probably will be among the last users to make the switch.
"This is a good innovation, but the uptake may be slow to begin because it is so different," Olson said.
Tuesday's release comes six months after Microsoft previewed the new-look Office, which includes popular word processing, spreadsheets and email programs.
"This is a fundamental shift in our business that began a several years ago," Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer wrote in a blog post.
The revamped Office boasts touch controls, just like the redesigned version of the Windows operating system that Microsoft Corp. released three months ago. The company, which is based in Redmond, Wash., is trying to ensure that its products retain their appeal at a time when people increasingly rely on smartphones and tablet computers instead of PCs.
To tap into that trend, Microsoft is promoting Office 2013 as a program tailor made for using over the Internet. All information is automatically stored in Microsoft's data centers, allowing for access to the same material on multiple devices. The content also can be stored on the hard drives of devices.
Yet Microsoft still isn't trying to get Office on the largest number of devices possible. Office 2013 doesn't include an option that works on Apple Inc.'s iPhone and iPad or smartphones and tablets running the Android software made by Google Inc. That leaves out the majority of smartphones and tablets sold in the past two years.
Microsoft is offering Office 2013 in a $100 annual subscription package, called 365 Home Premium, which includes online access on up to five Windows devices or Apple's line of Mac computers.
The company believes Office 2013 is currently best suited for Windows devices, said Chris Schneider, Microsoft's senior public relations manager for Office. Microsoft is limiting Office's reach as it tries to grab a bigger piece of the mobile market with its own operating system for smartphones and tablets.
Office will still be sold under a one-time licensing fee that allows the software to be installed on a single machine. Prices for that option start at $140 and range up to $400. People who don't need the entire Office bundle can buy individual programs such as Word, Excel and Outlook for $109 apiece.
Office 2013 is the first overhaul of the software suite in three years.
The bundle of programs has become a staple on desktop and laptop computers, providing a rich vein of revenue for Microsoft.
The company has reaped most of its Office sales from licenses allowing buyers to install the suite of programs on individual machines, a very lucrative strategy. The Microsoft division anchored by Office generates about $24 billion in annual sales, accounting for nearly one-third of Microsoft's total revenue.
Revenue in the Office division fell from the previous year during the three months ending in December, partly because many prospective buyers have been awaiting the latest version.
Microsoft's stock dipped a penny to $27.90 in Tuesday's afternoon trading. The shares are stuck around the same price as when the company released Windows 8 to great fanfare three months ago. Meanwhile, the benchmark Standard & Poor's 500 has climbed by about 7 percent.
Besides getting access to the suite's programs, 365 Home Premium subscribers receive 20 additional gigabytes of storage on Microsoft's SkyDrive to supplement the 7 gigabytes that the company gives away to accountholders for free. Subscribers also will get 60 minutes of free international calls on Microsoft's Skype service for Internet phone calls and video chats.
College students and teachers will be able to buy Office 2013's online product for $80 for four years, which works out to about $1.67 per month. This option requires proof of student status. A variety of Office subscriptions are also being offered, with monthly fees ranging from $6 to $20 per user.
The online push reflects Microsoft's recognition that people want access to documents and email on whatever Internet-connected device they might have, wherever they may be, whether it's at work, home or a store while running errands.
"The technology needs to be able to move with you," Schneider said.
It's the first time that Microsoft has tried to persuade consumers that a recurring online subscription is the best way to buy and use Office. Microsoft had previously sold online Office subscriptions primarily to small businesses.
"Over time, the majority of the billion plus people using Office will be using the Office 365 service," Ballmer predicted in his blog post.
The attempt to sell online Office subscription to consumers comes nearly seven years after Google unveiled its own Internet bundle of word processing, spreadsheet and email programs. Google gives away a basic version of those applications, and charges subscriptions for more sophisticated packages aimed primarily at small businesses.
Microsoft's decision to reshape Office into an online service makes sense, although it may take customers a while to embrace the concept, said Edward Jones analyst Josh Olson. He suspects major companies that rely on Office probably will be among the last users to make the switch.
"This is a good innovation, but the uptake may be slow to begin because it is so different," Olson said.
What's the difference between Office 2013 and Office 365 (apart from licence fee)?
http://meltingposts.com/2012/12/22/how-to-connect-your-gmail-twitter-facebook-and-other-accounts-together/
I use Office 2013 at work and moved the home PC up to it for uniformity - personally if I could use the old office on my windows 8 at work I would... I have no interest in my personal files being placed in 'the cloud' backups are one thing but daily use hell no!
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This just amuses and annoys me. I am currently using Office 2013 and it has the fugly windows 8 look and wants to put everything in the cloud. Other than that it is usable. The part that amuses me is that MS has had office applications going back over a decade. I had it on my iPAQ PDA back in 2000 or whenever it first came out. That screen is bigger than most phones and guess what...it is as hard to read and useless on a small screen then as it is now! I work in Excel all day that is my job. Using it on a tablet or phone..not!
to correct myself MS has had MOBILE office office applications for a very long time.
Gee, I dunno, probably would have been a good idea to do BEFORE you launched Win8?Â
Right now, I don't see how a touch screen would be better for the office applications that I use. I have become very efficient using a wireless mouse to perform most of the functions I require in excel, and the keyboard is still the best way to go for generating word documents.
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In short, touch screens are advantagous for viewing things, and the keyboard/mouse set up is better for editing functions.
 @barkingmad And you can still use your keyboard and mouse to do exactly what you are doing in applications prior to Office 2013/Windows 8. I don't often agree with Microsoft's direction especially the Vista/Windows 7 releases that did not add to the user experience in front of them. Office 2013 and Windows 8 is adding a whole new user experience that is late to market but by adding/optimizing the touch capabilities into Windows 8 that is also capable of running high powered desktop applications that don't need the touch interface Microsoft have combined the concept of an iPad and Desktop/Laptop into one device, something that you can not do with an Apple device (yet). Is Microsoft too late to join the iPad entertainment party side of their Windows 8 release (RT)? Time will tell but if the economy does not pick up this may be the biggest killer of Microsoft. I think they have the right formula but very few people are willing to take the chance it seems. Microsoft has deep pockets and Office 2013 and Windows 8 will roll into office environments but will Microsoft continue to commit to the entertainment portion of Windows 8 like the app store funding and Zune and Xbox on one machine or will the idiotic Wall Street analysts, you know, those people that are part of our mess we are in now with the economy, try to convince Microsoft to cut funding into these areas since Wall Street already thinks that the iPad is king and they seem to not be willing to let anyone else into Apple's market.  Â
I work in the technical industry - I operate many different types of technologies and operating systems. Microsoft doesn't understand "simple." Their new goodies require ever more resources and hardware to use. Windows 7 is a very useful and stable OS and I would like to see Windows 8 do well, but the market currently isn't very accepting of it. Microsoft is trying to create tablets from full computers while Apple and Android devices are used on phones and tablets that are expansions of a phone's capabilities - any wonder why they own a larger share of the market?
I see the Microsoft hate is out in full force. Â Did any of you even look at the photos of the new office? Â Did you notice how nothing was really changed, you still have the menus just like before? Â
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I'm getting really tired of "They changed something, now it's the worst thing in the world!" from people who have not actually had any hands-on time with the product. Â It's not like MS did a major overhaul and made the programs look entirely different. Â No, the fact is they added a few enhancements to make it easier for tablet users, but that doesn't mean the took away the ease-of-use for keyboard/mouse users either.
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@Landshark Office 2013 looks like 2010, with the exception of integrating Skydrive. IMO the only major change I've seen recently is when they added the ribbon in 2007
A software company that only makes software for the part of the company that is trying to become a hardware company. Â MSFT is suffering from a serious identity crisis. Â Stick with what you do and do it well. Â
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As an Apple user, I really do want MSFT to do well. Â I feel that good competition and a solid product by both companies, only benefits the consumer. Â I am afraid that until Mr. Balmer is gone, MSFT will continue to struggle. Â He just doesn't get it.Â
This is one company that simply just does not get it. They are trying to change something that worked, into a horrible experience. I have not met or talked to a single person who is impressed with Windows 8 or likes using it. And Windows Server 2012 is designed to look like Windows 8, and that completely amazes me. Systems engineers have no desire for something that has flashy tiles, we just want to do our work. Ballmer is the anchor for that sinking ship in redmond.
 @northwestsurfer I made use of 2012 sever for work... I flipped the desktop experience on so the tiles at least match my work laptop... took someone telling me where the shutdown was to figure it out... I'll be using windows 7 at home and not 8 ... I don't have a touch screen and the tiles I still dislike ... only thing I like in 8 is the new IE... which I cannot use in windows 7 other than that no use whatsoever... try having the lock screen go blank so the only way for me to log back in is to push the power button... just plain sloppy!
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 @northwestsurfer If you ever actually use Windows 8, you'll realize it does not change your desktop experience AT ALL.  Those who say they don't like it have not tried it at all.
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To say that Windows 8 is designed for tablets only is the biggest ignorant comment of the year. Â The only thing that is MORE USEFUL for tablets is the start menu. However, the start menu is also an improvement for mouse/keyboard users as well. Â Not to mention, the entire rest of the OS is just like Windows 7. Â
@Landshark Landshark what makes you think I have not used Windows 8? Your statement, just like mine is a matter of opinion. Ive seen you in the forums, and you are a staunch Microsoft supporter. Thats fine, but you cant tell me their software and operating systems are great; because to me and a lot of other people they suck.
I have used Windows 8, and I have used Server 2012; both are annoying, cumbersome, and counterproductive. They took a server OS and designed it like an end user operating system. I have no desire for something that is tiled with colorful graphics, it is an utter and complete waste of my time.
@Landshark @northwestsurfer I hear what you are saying, but I tried Windows 8 at a computer store in Bellevue and I did not like having to take my hand off the mouse or keyboard to touch the monitor then move them back to the mouse or keyboard. Having said that, my iPad works great with touch only. Which tells me the OS is designed for tablets and MS is trying to drag the PC community along. Trying to be fair to MS, though, I will be looking at cell phones tonight running 8 so I will try to keep an open mind. I need 5 phones and we are tired of having to reboot our Droids. I want MS to succeed!
@Landshark @northwestsurfer Good comments. Gotta run but I will think about it and get back to you tonight. I am not in the market for a new tablet but I am for cell phones so I want to follow up. Thanks!
 @Hagar  @Landshark  @northwestsurferÂ
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Hagar, your comments are little confusing to me, but I'm going to try to counter-argue them (in a polite way). Â
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1) You say you don't like having to switch between the mouse/keyboard and touch-screen while using Windows 8. Â What device were you using to try out Windows 8? Â
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If you are using JUST the new start menu interface (which the only available tablet OS - Windows 8 RT - that's out right now) then there's no need for the mouse/keyboard, because there is no traditional desktop in this version. Â In that sense, a tablet user who has Windows 8 RT installed would never need to use the mouse/keyboard.
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2) You say that your iPad works great as touch only.Â
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I feel you have compared apples to oranges. Â In your first statement you talk about having to use keyboard/mouse along with touch, but that is only available on laptops (with touch screens built in) and desktops using touch-screen capable monitors. Â Both of those are using the full Windows 8 OS, which includes both the start menu/touch interface AND the original desktop interface. Â
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As you are probably aware, the iPad does not have a full desktop experience, it only has the touch interface. Â This means you cannot install desktop apps on the iPad, but only apps from the app store.
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What you should be comparing is a tablet device that runs only Windows 8 RT to your iPad device. Â Both use touch screen only interfaces and both require that you use their respective app stores to download and install software.
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In the case of the device that I believe you tried (I'm guessing a laptop or desktop), that is an experience that your iPad cannot match. Â This is because Windows 8 (full version) gives you both the touch-screen interface (new start menu) along with a traditional desktop. Â This means you can install -any- Windows software AND you can install -any- app from the Microsoft App Store.
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@Landshark I have to concur. I have been using Windows 8 for a few months now and I found it fairly easy to get around. There are so many shortcuts available that I can get through the OS faster than I could with Windows 7. The learning curve is pretty minimal to becoming productive at the same level as you were with Windows 7. Under the hood is a bit more complicated...
@northwestsurfer Add me to the list of people who have no use for Win8. It is clearly designed with phones in mind. My laptop....not being a phone....well...Annoying is the most polite term I can put on that OS
 @NBA_Is_Useless  @northwestsurfer And you have clearly not used Windows 8, you've only read the opinions from MS Haters who don't like anything MS does.
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The new Windows 8 is NOT DESIGNED FOR TABLETS. Â The new start menu IS, but the rest of the OS is just like Windows 7. Â
@Landshark @RDG @NBA_Is_Useless I have used it, and hated it.
@Landshark @NBA_Is_Useless Actually I have used Windows 8. It is clear that microsoft's push is in the tablet direction. That operating system is tiled, which is much more optimized for touch screen. What happened to the icons? They dont exist. And explain to me why the tablet is virtually all you see on the Windows 8 commercials? Stop advocating dude, whatever they are paying you to evangelize in these forums, its not enough.
@robmo I tried running as administrator & even changing the OS compatibility type & no luck. Eventually later when I try again, it will probably work, just like when I went from 32 bit to 64 bit. For some reason when I tried switching to 64 bit early on in W7, it would keep crashing, but work fine in 32 bit.
 @NBA_Is_Useless  @Landshark  @NBA_Is_Useless  @northwestsurfer NBA_is_useless, I haven't seen you provide any examples of why you think it's annoying.  All you say is that it's annoying, but what exactly are you talking about? Â
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@Landshark @NBA_Is_Useless @northwestsurfer I OWN WIN8 but thanks for trying to protect your stock option value.
@Landshark @RDG @NBA_Is_Useless @northwestsurfer Getting WMP to open the video wasn't the issue, but some videos had no video, but picture, & vice versa. It's mainly have to do with MS not including all the codecs in W8. When I tried to install aftermarket codec, I still had the same issues.
@choliscott I have found that with some installers you have to right-click and choose Run As Administrator. You may have administrator rights on your computer but you're not always running in administrator context depending on what you're doing.
 @choliscott  @Landshark  @RDG  @NBA_Is_Useless  @northwestsurferÂ
Out of curiosity, which programs did you have trouble installing?
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Personally I've had no problems installing any software, even stuff that's from 5+ years ago.
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As for the WMV issue, that's as simple as making Windows Media Player your default device for whatever file types you want it to be. Â
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There are options within WMP to do just that. Â Of you can right-click on the media file and choose "Open With" and follow the prompts from there. Â There will either be a checkbox that says, "Use this app for all xxx files" or it will say, "Choose default program". Â This is the same behavior as Windows 7, so nothing new here.
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@Landshark @RDG @NBA_Is_Useless @northwestsurfer I have tried Windows 8 & once I got used to the new start menu, I actually liked it. However I ended up going back to W7, because of the following reasons
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1) Few programs I use would not install. The install would just freeze and no, I'm not going to allow an OS to decide that I need to start using another program.
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2) When playing any other video formats besides .wmv would not play in WMP. It would play fine in the new video player, but if I want to watch a video at full screen, I'll watch it on my tv. On the video issue, I was able to get it to work with the other formats by installing the drivers for my webcam.
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 @RDG  @NBA_Is_Useless  @northwestsurfer Can you please explain to me how the design gets in the way of the mouse?
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Using a 1920x1080 resolution monitor I can have 72 icons on the new start menu. Â That's 72 icons immediately available without having to click through lists of programs and folders. Â That's WAAYYY easier and faster to navigate than the windows 7 start menu.
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And if you want more than 72, it's only a simple scroll of the mouse wheel to see the rest of the icons off the side of the page, no clicking required! Â
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Lastly, you can add the windows 7 start menu to Windows 8 and never have to use the windows 8 start menu.
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You can also add/pin any program to the desktop taskbar. Â And using the new multi-monitor taskbar you can have programs open on your 2nd monitor only show up on the 2nd monitor taskbar, again the new features of Windows 8 making your workspace cleaner and more organized, and quicker to access.
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So again, people who complain haven't even tried it. Â
 @Landshark  @NBA_Is_Useless  @northwestsurfer The problem is that the start menu is designed for a touch screen and very few touch screen laptops are even available. ...and this design gets in the way when using a mouse. With past versions of Windows you could select "classic mode" which would put it back to what people are used to. Instead MS wantS to drive the market to the tablet venue and people don't want that. I don't know of anyone that does serious office type work with a tablet.  ...and yes I've used Windows 8.
Seems like a GINORMOUS mistake by MSFT. These changes will make Office less than ideal for a regular PC/Laptop and yet it will also be inadequate for smartphones and tablets. In short, the right product for no one. All things to all people is a road to hell for a product.
 @NBA_Is_Useless The RIBBON is the WORST feature ever. STILL HATE IT.
Full Microsoft Office suite is already available on the iPad. CloudOn app runs Office as an IaaS solution with full functionality. Oh, and because Microsoft went after their revenue model, it's free. You do need a persistent connection being a cloud service. No I have no vested interest other than being a user.
Oh I remember office, and outlook. Haven't bought a copy for about 6 years now. Six years ago I bought office for Mac, which sucked so horribly I've never really used it. Tried to use outlook for Mac (Entourage) only to find that it doesn't import PST files, and doesn't support html email. The Windows version has gotten so horrible with the ribbon menu that I just avoid it now. I'm not going near Windows 8. It looks like Microsoft Bob redesigned.
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Microsoft is always worried about the competition, but generally they shoot themselves in the foot and drive people to find new solutions by "improving" products to the point where people get confused and hate them. Good luck with that office stuff - I don't need it anymore.
This is assuming that office functions appropriately on tablet devices. It is already becoming far too complex for many laptops. Tablets are not production devices and office is a production application, I don't see it working well.
I think ignoring the iOs and Android markets is a huge mistake, Mr. Blamer.
@Hagar Who said they are ignoring that market?Â
@AmFuzzy "Yet Microsoft still isn't trying to get Office on the largest number of devices possible. Office 2013 doesn't include an option that works on Apple Inc.'s iPhone and iPad or smartphones and tablets running the Android software made by Google Inc. That leaves out the majority of smartphones and tablets sold in the past two years."
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Read the article again
@AmFuzzy I hope you are right, my friend!
@northwestsurfer I know all to well what the article says. You assume MSFT isn't supporting the iOS and Android markets. All I am saying is you don't know what you don't know, same for the author.Â
 @northwestsurfer  @AmFuzzy I think we are forgetting the part where there is already an existing app/software link for iOS and Android for other versions of MS Office.  Just because 2013 isn't on them yet doesn't mean there is no MS Office option for iOS and Android users.