(Microsoft)
Android
phandroids, your long wait is finally over. Microsoft’s mainstay
productivity suite is finally available on Google-flavored phones.
Tacitly
acknowledging that nobody is going to switch to Windows Phone just so
they can edit PowerPoint presentations with their thumbs, Microsoft
today officially made Office available for Android phones,
free of charge. (It has been available for Android tablets since
February.) A preview version has been available in the Google Play store
since mid-May.
Now
you can take your weighty Word docs, impressive Excel spreadsheets, and
scintillating PowerPoint presentations with you, edit them on your
Android phone, and then share all that Microsofty goodness with your
colleagues. When you open the files on your computer, all your changes
will be there, formatted correctly.
For
that to work, of course, you’ll need to store your docs in the cloud.
Office for Android phone can connect to most of the major cloud storage
services, including Google Drive, Box, Dropbox, and Microsoft’s
Sharepoint or OneDrive (obviously), but not iCloud.
Microsoft is making this version of Office free for personal use. If you want to use it commercially, you’ll need a paid subscription to Office 365
(at $10 a month, or $100 per year). The premium version will also give
you a handful of extra features in Android Office, such as the ability
to track edit changes in Word or annotate slides using PowerPoint Ink
and save the information.
You can manually annotate PowerPoint slides with ‘Ink’ for free, but saving annotations is going to cost you. (Microsoft)
Office
for Android Phones will work on Android handsets running KitKat
(Android 4.4) and Lollipop (5.x); Microsoft says it will also support
Google’s upcoming version of Android, known today only as “M,” when it
becomes available. Office will come preloaded on Android phones from
major handset makers — such as Samsung, LG, and Sony — later this year.
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