Instead, it has plenty of features beyond the basics. Given how bare-bones Microsoft’s existing versions of Office for the iPhone and Android are, I was prepared for the iPad one to be similarly minimalist. (Alternatively, you can choose to save them only on your iPad, although I’m not sure why you’d want to do that.) Other current versions of Office do that, too, so you don’t need to go through any fancy logistics to get to your documents to and from any device that runs Office. Just as you’d assume, the three apps save everything to your Microsoft OneDrive online storage by default. The level of polish and performance is high: Actions such as dragging, dropping and resizing objects feel as if they were designed to work well with the touchscreen, which isn’t always true of the more conventional version of Office that comes with Microsoft’s Surface 2 tablet. The Ribbon toolbar, for instance, is skinny and streamlined, freeing up more of the iPad’s limited on-screen real estate for content. They look very much like Office as it exists elsewhere, but Microsoft didn’t just cram the existing interface onto the iPad’s screen. Once I was up and running, I found a lot in all three new apps that’s impressive.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |