Microsoft may want to bring its Office applications to the iPad sooner rather than later.Rico says he uses (and paid for) all three iWork apps, and will continue to do so; using the Office apps (even if free) never occurred to him...
Apple recently made its own rival suite of productivity apps, iWork, free to anyone who buys new Mac computers and the company’s mobile devices, including iPads. While iWork has been around for years, it hasn’t inflicted much apparent damage on Office, one of the most resilient products at Microsoft.
But without the $9.99 fee that Apple charges for each of the three iWork applications— Pages, a word processor; Numbers, a spreadsheet app; and Keynote, a presentation app— that could change. The apps are free to people who buy new hardware from Apple, but not to the huge numbers of people who already own Apple devices. People who already have iWork can upgrade their apps free, too. (Technically, people who bought iOS 7 devices by 1 September 2013 or later, or a Mac on 1 October 2013 or later, will also qualify.)
Microsoft sells a subscription to Office 365 for a hundred dollars a year. Microsoft began working on an iPad version of Office some time ago but, for reasons that remain unclear, the company has not released it. Recently, Steve Ballmer, Microsoft’s chief executive, confirmed that the company is working on Office for the iPad, but it didn’t say when it will release the product.
The company might want to give its Surface tablets an advantage, since those devices come with copies of Office. The more difficult question for Microsoft is whether it can stomach sharing thirty percent of the sales of Office apps for iPad with Apple; that is the standard cut Apple takes for software sold through its App Store.
Asked about Apple’s decision to give away its iWork apps, Heather Knox, a senior director for Microsoft Office, said in a statement that a web-based version of Office is the best free alternative to Microsoft’s traditional Office applications. “They extend the Office experience you know and love with anytime, anywhere online editing and collaboration,” Knox said.
Apple also took aim at the fees that Microsoft charges people who upgrade from one major release of Windows to another. Apple said existing Mac users can upgrade to the new version of the operating system, Mavericks, for free, waiving the twenty to thirty dollar fee it has charged for such upgrades in the past.
Microsoft charges $120 for people who want to upgrade Windows 7 PCs to Windows 8.1, the latest version of the operating system. The upgrade is free if they have Windows 8 on their systems.
23 October 2013
Apple for the day
Nick Wingfield has an article in The New York Times about the latest in the Apple v. Microsoft war:
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