The move is a significant
one for Microsoft and its users. Before, the popular set of tools,
including Word, Excel, PowerPoint and Outlook, was available only on
Windows phones, which have captured a sliver of the smartphone market.
The feature is available
free in Apple's App Store for subscribers to Office 365, the cloud-based
version of Office's business-like tools for home users. Subscribers pay
a monthly fee.
Office for iPhone
is intended for people who need to edit PowerPoints or Excel
spreadsheets on the go, not create them from their phones. The company
said users can work with documents on their phones, and the updates will
be transferred to those documents on PC versions. They'll also be able
to share documents from their phones.
"When we launched Office
365 earlier this year, we committed to delivering regular updates and
new capabilities to Office 365 subscribers," Julia White, general
manager of Microsoft's Office division, said in a blog post. "Office Mobile for iPhone is another great example of the value of subscribing to Office 365."
The announcement comes
just days after Apple announced that its own iWork productivity suite
will for the first time work with Windows systems.
The Microsoft
announcement serves as a counter, allowing the same kind of
back-and-forth for the larger number of users who are already familiar
with Office, considered by many the gold standard of productivity
software.
There is no similar
version of Office optimized for the iPad, which has its own more fully
developed Web browser. Microsoft also did not mention whether it's
developing a version for Google's Android mobile devices.
Office for iPhone is available now for users in the United States and will soon rolled out internationally, the company said.
Source: CNN
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