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Microsoft believes Apple is playing catch up with iPad/iWork

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Here's the thing:

Pages isn't Word. That's absolutely for sure.

BUT.

If you're a student writing an essay, Pages may just do everything you need it to. Most people don't use 95% of Word's features.

Yeah but most students can't afford over priced laptops either.
 
Ok so I guess people just kinda took the narrow view of what I said. The number of classes of devices is diversifying far faster than it ever has, and the cumulative number of devices sold across all categories is increasing. The average person owns far more computational devices now than ever before but perhaps it's not obvious.

Do you own: A PC? Laptop? Tablet? Smartphone? Game Console? Portable Game Console? eReader? TV? Blu-ray Player? Streaming box? Cable Box? DVR? Smart-watch? Smart-glasses? Fitness tracker? Other wearable? Modern Appliances (Fridge, coffee maker, laundry machine dryer etc?)? Alarm Clock? Modern Printer? Smart Thermostat? Smart Smoke detector? Sprinkler System? Radio? Car (and car accessories)? Smart lighting? Smart locks? Robotics (Roomba etc)? Toys & Games?

Essentially everything you own is becoming a generalized, programmable device. If you can add the word "smart" to it then it's another type of device. And it's important to understand because these are connected, run software and conceivably run apps. It's no different than your dumb phone becoming smart, and many of these are incorporating screens and internet connectivity the same way. You own more, a lot more, but you probably don't even think about it because they seem uni-tasky but when we talk about the need for multiple computing machines a tablet doesn't cut it, we need use a bunch because they do something others can't or don't do very well.

I've got a Wii, a Macbook and a flip phone.
 
Microsoft has already announced that they are working on touch first version of the Office Suite that they are bringing to Windows and other devices. They already have office on windows phone, iphone and andriod phones. As well as Lync, Skype, Onenote, Xbox Music/Video etc.. just about everywhere.
In the first of a series of posts that examine some Microsoft revelations from this week's Financial Analysts Meeting, here's a look at what the firm's executives said about Microsoft Office coming to iPad and Android tablets, and how this meshes with what we already knew.

Perhaps not surprisingly, this is a hot-button topic for Microsoft these days and for obvious reasons: With the market for personal computing expanding beyond traditional PCs to include smart phones and tablets, Microsoft no longer owns a stranglehold on what it calls "the end points" for individuals' computing experience. Thus, it should expand the reach of Office—which, by the way is its biggest business by far—to include the other platforms that are popular as, if not more popular than, Windows. After all, Microsoft makes Office for the Mac, and that system is the smallest of all the major OS platforms by far.

To frame this discussion, it is very important to understand that there will soon be four "types" of Office, and that three of those are available today. These are:

Full Office. This is the traditional version of Office that is offered on full-featured PCs with keyboard and mouse accessories, or Office for Windows and the Mac. This will always be the most full-featured version of the product, and while it's moving from a traditional software delivery form to one that is delivered online as part of a subscription, the mission is unchanged. Furthermore, the "full" Office will always include more applications—and thus more diverse functionality—than you will see in the other versions (Publisher, Visio, and so on).

Office on the Web. This version of Office—called Office Web Apps—provides a subset of the full Office experience, which can be expressed in two ways: A subset of the actual applications—here, we see Word Web App, Excel Web App, OneNote Web App, PowerPoint Web App, and Outlook Web App only—and a subset of the capabilities of the corresponding full Office applications. Office Web Apps can be had for free (except for Outlook Web App) or as part of an Office 365 subscription and by other means.

Office Mobile. Microsoft provides this stripped down offering on smart phones, including Windows Phone, iPhone, and Android handsets. As with Office Web Apps, Office Mobile is a subset of full Office, both in the apps offered—Word, Excel, OneNote, and PowerPoint Mobile—and in their capabilities. (PowerPoint Mobile is particularly limited).

Touch-first Office. And here we get to a new Office offering, one that Microsoft first discussed for Windows 8/RT—on those platforms it is thus a "Metro"-style app—back in June at Build. At the time, all Microsoft would say is that it was working on such a product and that it would ship sometime in 2014. But with this week's Financial Analysts Meeting, we now know more. And we know it's coming to iPad and Android tablets too.

In response to the very first question asked at this event, Qi Lu, the executive vice president of Microsoft's Applications and Services Group had this to say about how/when Microsoft would port its Office applications to iPad and Android devices.

"We are working on touch-first versions for our core apps in the Office suite, Outlook, Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and we will bring these apps to Windows devices, and also to other devices in ways that meets our customers' needs, and the customer value of those experiences, and in ways that economically make sense for Microsoft, and at a proper timetable. That's how we think about making these decisions as the question is being posed."

He also noted, "the first factor [strategically] is customer interest and customer experience. It is quite important for us to ensure that there's genuine customer interest, customer need, and at the same time we can also deliver a quality experience that serves our customer's needs. The second factor is economics, and financially it has to make sense for Microsoft. So those are the two factors that guide our decision-making."

To recap:

Touch-first Office is coming. First to Windows 8 and Windows RT, but also to "others devices." This means iPad and Android OS. And while I've never explicitly heard about Office on Android tablets, I've heard a ton about the work being done to get Office on iPad. It's happening.

Touch-first Office will also be a sub-set of Full Office. Qi Lu mentioned that Outlook, Word, Excel, and PowerPoint would be part of that offering, and of course OneNote, Lync and other related apps like Skype, SkyDrive, and SkyDrive Pro are all available on iPad and Android already.

Touch-first Office will functionally sit between Office Mobile and Full Office. Since touch-first Office will "deliver a quality experience that serves Microsoft's customer's needs," it won't be a scaled-up version of Office Mobile. In fact, I think it's reasonable to expect something that is akin to an offline, touch-based version of Office Web Apps from a functional experience. Just my gut feeling.

Touch-first Office won't be free. This was never said explicitly, but since touch-first Office has to make financial sense for Microsoft, we can assume that this offering will require an Office 365 subscription, at least on iPad and Android.
http://winsupersite.com/office/microsoft-strategy-update-office-ipad-and-android-tablets

So yeah, I think Microsoft is well aware of where the market is heading. Their plan seems to be to put their services everywhere (with subscriptions most likely) and build devices that run windows as well as continue to sell windows to anyone that wants it. Aka, devices and services company. And i think it is pretty clear they know windows isn't the market leader going forward, or at least 90% market. That is why you see them expanding to other platforms with their services, which is where most of their money will be made in the future.
 
Seems like MBP are all over the place when I'm on campus.

Yeah it always feels that way but its all the rich kids. Anecdotal but in my university barely anyone had a Mac. I see a lot around campus but it just seems like more people have them because you tend to notice them more since its different than the norm and I think TV always plays a big part in the perception.

Mac sales are in decline much worse than the PC industry:

It might be even worse than that. If you ask Gartner's rival consultancy IDC, Macintosh shipments fell by more than 11%.

http://money.cnn.com/2013/10/10/technology/mac-pc-sales/
 
But why? Maybe right now you may have a good reason. But in a year or two when you can get a good inexpensive tablet with fantastic battery life and good performance, that can run whatever you want; well, why wouldn't you want such a device?
Physics. A 7-8" Tablet is the best, most comfortable form factor, whereas on a productivity device you need at least 11 inches, and preferably 12-13.
Until they invent mass-market foldable screens, it's not happening.
 
Here's the thing:

Pages isn't Word. That's absolutely for sure.

BUT.

If you're a student writing an essay, Pages may just do everything you need it to. Most people don't use 95% of Word's features.

Yes, but if that's all you needed, you could do that with free productivity apps already available on the store.

Everyone knows that iPad's incredible success is given because tens of millions of people already knew how it was used because it was/is essentially a blown up iPhone.
As i said people can't figure out that the WIndows logo is a button because they look at what it is... a Windows logo, unlike others there isn't anything that makes you think that the thing is a button. Apple has a single very noticeable hardware button, Androids have either soft buttons where icons actually gives you an hint what it does (an home, a back arrow, a magnifying glass etc.) or a mix of the hard and soft buttons.
But still even if you remove this problem there are the others that i and others listed. The fact that opening certain apps switches you between the two GUIs alone shows how Metro is clearly an afterthought or at the very least badly designed.

But i'm sure that for you this is a joke post and that people can't be so stupid that don't want to/can't use a Surface. At this point I'll stop here because clearly we are going full circles.

I'm sorry, but it's not hard to figure out and they're not the first to do it. Again, if they can't figure out how to return to the metro then they don't have the mental cycles to use any other tablet. They all work in the same way with that function.
 
Microsofts biggest problem in the phone and tablet space is timing more than anything.

They were just too LTTP on both counts.

They were in the phone and tablet space far longer than Apple and Google. They just never executed properly and just slapped regular windows on phones and tablets. Now they're executing well enough but they're way too late to gain traction.
 
If anything they're too early. At least until the silly stigma that people likes less functions on their devices run out. Most people attribute success to a single or two factors and think they know what everyone wants.
 
Honest question: Is there really a large market for Office/productivity apps on tablets?

Seriously, I consider iWork a nice to have more than anything. I wouldn't seriously create any documents on the iPad but it's good to have to make quick edits. Office might be more robust, but MS messed up by not making a tablet optimized version for Windows RT. It'd be like Apple including iWork for OSX on the iPad. Makes no sense to me.

With the iPad you get iWork and iLife standard and I think that's going to be big for a lot of people that want to do basic productivity, photo enhancements, movie making and music making. It makes the iPad a more complete product out of the box.

We all grew up using Office and as much as I dislike it, I know the ins and outs of it after 20+ years so I still use it. The new generation growing up on iPad don't give a shit about Office, they will grow up on iWork. That's going to be a problem for MS as time goes on. They need to make Surface a success or release Office for iPad/Android yesterday.
 
See, you have some people arguing that new generation of folks will grow up on iWork then other people saying tablets shouldn't be used for productive tasks like using iWork to type documents.
 
Microsoft has already announced that they are working on touch first version of the Office Suite that they are bringing to Windows and other devices. They already have office on windows phone, iphone and andriod phones. As well as Lync, Skype, Onenote, Xbox Music/Video etc.. just about everywhere.
http://winsupersite.com/office/microsoft-strategy-update-office-ipad-and-android-tablets

So yeah, I think Microsoft is well aware of where the market is heading. Their plan seems to be to put their services everywhere (with subscriptions most likely) and build devices that run windows as well as continue to sell windows to anyone that wants it. Aka, devices and services company. And i think it is pretty clear they know windows isn't the market leader going forward, or at least 90% market. That is why you see them expanding to other platforms with their services, which is where most of their money will be made in the future.

As long as they're pushing subs I will continue to use Apple and Google productivity software or use their old Office suites sans sub. Sorry but I'm not paying a monthly sub to use fucking Office.
 
See, you have some people arguing that new generation of folks will grow up on iWork then other people saying tablets shouldn't be used for productive tasks like using iWork to type documents.

I don't think people are saying that tablets shouldn't be used for productivity (except for maybe Tobor, but his point is more that Office, with its menus, UI, and concessions to its desktop heritage, isn't a good fit for the tablet form factor). People are saying that tablets generally aren't used for such tasks. But those who do invariably and necessarily use non-Microsoft solutions, which is troubling if Microsoft wants to maintain this idea of Office being a killer app.
 
I really don't see why we can't want our tablets to do more, that makes no sense. Why would more restrictions and less functionality be a bad thing? I don't think windows 8 is perfect but its a good step. When it was impossible for an x86 architecture to compete on a power/efficiency level I understood - but that is no longer than case.
 
I don't think people are saying that tablets shouldn't be used for productivity (except for maybe Tobor, but his point is more that Office, with its menus, UI, and concessions to its desktop heritage, isn't a good fit for the tablet form factor). People are saying that tablets generally aren't used for such tasks. But those who do invariably and necessarily use non-Microsoft solutions, which is troubling if Microsoft wants to maintain this idea of Office being a killer app.

Yes they are. And yes the current office isn't optimized for touch, but they're working on it. OneNote is a good start. If the problem is that Office isn't so good for touch interfaces then people should say that rather than "no one would want to be productive on their tablets, MS doesn't get it".
 
Yes they are. And yes the current office isn't optimized for touch, but they're working on it. OneNote is a good start. If the problem is that Office isn't so good for touch interfaces then people should say that rather than "no one would want to be productive on their tablets, MS doesn't get it".
That's not the biggest problem though. The real problem is that Office isn't on the tablets that people actually buy and use.
 
That's not the biggest problem though. The real problem is that Office isn't on the tablets that people actually buy and use.

Chicken and egg eh? They chose a strategy and there's not much point agonizing over why they didn't choose otherwise.
 
Chicken and egg eh? They chose a strategy and there's not much point agonizing over why they didn't choose otherwise.
Isn't that the point everyone is making though? Microsoft's strategy to keep Office exclusive to Windows is driving tablet owners to iWork and Google Docs. Which is dangerous for Microsoft because it creates the opportunity for a market where Office isn't necessary.
 
Isn't that the point everyone is making though? Microsoft's strategy to keep Office exclusive to Windows is driving tablet owners to iWork and Google Docs. Which is dangerous for Microsoft because it creates the opportunity for a market where Office isn't necessary.

Everyone? Come on now.

Again that's their strategy and you can have equal amount of arguments why Microsoft isn't pushing their own OS and devices over others. Not interested in arguing over such choices.
 
Isn't that the point everyone is making though? Microsoft's strategy to keep Office exclusive to Windows is driving tablet owners to iWork and Google Docs. Which is dangerous for Microsoft because it creates the opportunity for a market where Office isn't necessary.

Nah. The thing is these people 100% cannot abandon traditional form factors. Mobile is a non-risk, it's a nice-to-have but nobody is basing their software purchases on the ability to edit spreadsheets on a tablet. I doubt people would even pay very much for it as a stand-alone because it's just not a good fit. They want it because they have iPads from home and it's good for viewing things at meetings and such but once they're done they go back to their office and plug something into a docking station or have a full computer rig going.

Even then the two things that could increase usability are things Apple won't touch, keyboards and styluses because they bloat and complicate their own vision and what people love about tablets.
 
Seriously, I consider iWork a nice to have more than anything. I wouldn't seriously create any documents on the iPad but it's good to have to make quick edits. Office might be more robust, but MS messed up by not making a tablet optimized version for Windows RT. It'd be like Apple including iWork for OSX on the iPad. Makes no sense to me.

With the iPad you get iWork and iLife standard and I think that's going to be big for a lot of people that want to do basic productivity, photo enhancements, movie making and music making. It makes the iPad a more complete product out of the box.

We all grew up using Office and as much as I dislike it, I know the ins and outs of it after 20+ years so I still use it. The new generation growing up on iPad don't give a shit about Office, they will grow up on iWork. That's going to be a problem for MS as time goes on. They need to make Surface a success or release Office for iPad/Android yesterday.

It has to make advancements in handling more advanced things that Office can handle that it can't and without that I can't see it penetrating the corporate side of sales and you can't kill off office unless you do that.

See, you have some people arguing that new generation of folks will grow up on iWork then other people saying tablets shouldn't be used for productive tasks like using iWork to type documents.

They really can't depending on what you're talking about. You're usually doing more than writing essays for your class at a normal job so iWork can't cut it for many things still. This also all hinges on apple keeping majority marketshare and tablets completely outstripping pcs for corporate work. Also, see below.

I don't think people are saying that tablets shouldn't be used for productivity (except for maybe Tobor, but his point is more that Office, with its menus, UI, and concessions to its desktop heritage, isn't a good fit for the tablet form factor). People are saying that tablets generally aren't used for such tasks. But those who do invariably and necessarily use non-Microsoft solutions, which is troubling if Microsoft wants to maintain this idea of Office being a killer app.

It really isn't though... iWorks is incredibly barebones and there's no way I could do my finance work with iWork, I need macros and other things for them to work. It's going to take a lot more work on apple's part for it to ever get into corporations and unless it does, it can never truly kill Office since it would have to be an evolution to kill both to dethrone it.
 
They're shitting their bricks because Apple just not only released a free "good enough" Office suite for most of the world but made it collaborate online without even having to have the shit installed.
 
I still prefer Word over Google Docs only because Google Docs doesn't fucking put page numbers in their table of contents for some absurd fucking reason. Printing documents out is far from dead in the office environment, and a proper table of contents is necessary when docs are any longer than 10 pages, which design docs routinely are.

However, I have no experience with iWork. I guess I should start giving it a try on iOS as I got it for free, but I hardly ever want to poke at a word doc while on my phone or tablet.
 
it's funny, because he's not wrong, but at the same time.... he's really wrong. Office is the only thing 'leading' about microsoft and tablets.

I like the surface and it has a really good shot at catching the corporate market. But apple is killing it because people don't really give as much of a shit about a productive tablet as MS thinks.
 
Do people here realize that Microsoft has free Office Web Apps that anyone can use? I'm not sure why price always comes up when talking about Office, especially when pointing out that "most people don't need everything Word does".

The thing about Office is that no one needs everything it does. But every feature is used by a huge number of people. The entire purpose of the Ribbon was to show people that their top-10 feature requests were already in the product, just difficult to find.


people don't really give as much of a shit about a productive tablet as MS thinks.

Why does almost every single iPad I see have some hoakey 3rd-party keyboard attached to it? And why is Apple making such a big deal about iWork for iPad if no one gives a shit?
 
Said the company who released Surface a few years too late to catch up with Apple, Google, and other companies. Stay flopping, MS!

iblIFG6l7XS9wH.gif

I'm still trying to figure out why you posted this gif.

I mean... not that I'm complaining...
 
Both MS and Google have had that for years.

Google doesn't have a native client and MS's online web tools don't live collaborate. Office Web Apps it's not updated until it's "saved" on the other person's client.

On iWork for iCloud it's fucking eerie how quick it updates between people.
 
Google doesn't have a native client and MS's online web tools don't live collaborate. Office Web Apps it's not updated until it's "saved" on the other person's client.

On iWork for iCloud it's fucking eerie how quick it updates between people.

The Office Web App added real-time collaboration a few months ago. Google docs can be used offline as a Chrome app, you can even create shortcuts directly to it.
 
And it will be as long as keyboards are the fastest way to type. So you connect a bunch of junk to it and you have what's kinda a laptop but less neat. Different devices do different things well. The biggest misconception in technology is that devices are converging. Ask yourself do you own more or less devices now than 5 years ago?

I know you've clarified your point, but I feel the need to interject on one point here.

You are right, the number of available devices is growing, and the amount people own may be growing as well. This is primarily because, despite convergence of features, it's more to add a feature to the box and advertising than approached from an actual use case scenario.

I mean, "smart TV" seems to be the big talking point right now in that sector, but people aren't actually using them, because they already have a cable box off to the side that is their primary interaction with the device itself. So all of that converging technology just simply goes unused except to illicit a "wow" factor when you take it out of the box.

The features are all there, but there's a certain... discomfort having to rely on 2 different devices and interfaces. For smart TVs to be truly convergent, TV makers should have been dropping cable box functions into the TVs themselves and allowing cable companies to drop some firmware in to get them running, or a hardware module you can plug into the back, as they already do for certain models as I had seen on TV. THAT is true convergence, because it doesn't just merge features, it merges use cases into a cohesive whole.

This is why there is still fragmentation: tech companies simply don't understand that features without a use case are useless.

And this includes Apple products, as well. I have long held the belief that the Apple TV should become a full-on set-top box with all the Apple TV's features overlaid onto the standard set-top PVR experience. THAT would drive adoption, much like integrating the iPod/iTunes ecosystem into phones with the iPhone was a primary driving motivation for early adoption. People never left home without both their phones and their iPods, so the use case was there, and Apple was able to capitalize. That is an example of convergence done right.

And this is where Microsoft is struggling.

The use case for the iPad was very simple: people wanted something in between the powerful PC and the handy but limited iPhone. PCs and Macs both are complex by layers of abstraction, and that is entirely by design and their nature. You can do ANYTHING with them, and that's part of the boundary to adoption and part of the consumer stigma applied to them.
Before the iPad, people who wanted a Mac or PC would say "it's just too much computer for me, when all I mostly do is check my email and browse the internet."
Netbooks were a step in the right direction but didn't gain traction for this reason: despite being "less computer", it still had all the layers of abstraction that made it appear to be the same as any other computer.
However, the very user-friendly iPhone/iPod touch/etc. are clearly designed as on-the-go devices, not something to enjoy in one place.
There was a use case that had been waiting to be filled since the PC first became a big must-have thing back in the 90s and became more apparent when there was another marker denoting where the middle ground that needed to be achieved was.

Meanwhile, for the sake of convergence and so as not to give up on the "power user" stereotype of Windows product users, we have Surface, which suffers from the same problem that netbooks did: despite a lot of ease-of-use interface wrapping, any time you use it as advertised, the wrapping comes off and the layers of abstraction show through again and make it seem like something more than what people are looking for, or conversely, not enough.
It's not enough computer for people who need that and it's not enough tablet for people who need that.
They made a convergence device without a use case. Currently there simply is not enough of a use case for a quarter-measure intermediary between a tablet and a PC (or not enough to build a market around it, anyways). Most people are quite fine to go to either extreme, which is hardly the same extreme as it used to be when it was just full-on computer to a smartphone.

And make no mistake, consumers have set smartphones and computers as the borderlands for their multipurpose work/entertainment devices, and anything too far in either direction outside of it is simply not of enough interest to the modern consumer to build a market around it. Apple TV as a $99 TV relay for all your other devices is a great thing... but the use case for another box attached to the TV with ANOTHER user interface you access separately is never going to be mass market. It needs to cannibalize another use case or find a new one that's in need of exploiting.

Microsoft tried to find a new use case, and in turn made the Surface the answer to a question no one asked.
 
8.1 was free.
Windows is what, 25% of MS revenue? That is their most threatened business unit I think.

About the office discussion, most people can deal with basic productivity functions. For the non twitter/facebook use, for those who need to type long texts on their tablet, the BT keyboard exists. I brought my tiny mac keyboard on vacation last summer and it did the job perfectly, it's not as if iPad users were left out of options.

I'm interested to see if this Office key competitive advantage will still work in this day and age.
 
8.1 was free.

Yes but Microsoft is shit at marketing. See, Microsoft throws out 8.1 and the common perception is just that it's an update that fixes some bugs or something.

Apple makes up a fancy code-name and shows it their "new" OS at widely watched conferences. The perception that 8 -> 8.1 is equivalent to Mountain Lion -> Mavericks isn't created because they used the old software version notation rather than being smart about it like Apple has been.

Also, I'm not convinced that the jump is the same either. I haven't even upgraded to Windows 8 because 7->8 was a downgrade IMHO. At least Apple doesn't seem to downgrade their OS with every other release.
 
Isn't 8.1 only free for people who own Windows 8?

vs Mac users who can go straight to Maverick whatever their previous OS?
 
apple is playing catch up to microsoft dismantling its own business model, yeah. imagine if you told the microsoft of 5 years ago that come 2013 it'd be bundling office with its own hardware and waiving software license fees just to protect its own platform.

microsoft knows now that the days of selling software are coming to an end. software once promised unprecedented profits due to its lack of variable costs, but that didn't anticipate the drive to "less than free" products as an inducement for profit-generating device or advertising businesses. microsoft isn't under imminent threat due to the slow-moving business world, but long-term its current model is done for. the problem is, there's no reason to expect microsoft's devices play to ever be successful.

you can't compete with free, and only microsoft is in the position of having nothing else to sell.

edit: one of the best analyses of recent times http://abovethecrowd.com/2011/03/24/freight-train-that-is-android/
 
Apple completely screwed up the new version of Pages on ipad. Had to revert to a previous version. So they're becoming like Microsoft already.
 
Why does almost every single iPad I see have some hoakey 3rd-party keyboard attached to it? And why is Apple making such a big deal about iWork for iPad if no one gives a shit?

I've seen one person ever with a 3rd party keyboard attached to an ipad.

best I can figure is surface can replace laptops. They won't replace ipads though. Ipads are simple. there's a market for that.

I own both and I prefer the surface, but there is some things, like sitting in front of tv and browsing the web during ads, that an ipad suits way more.

I would rather self-immolate than use Microsoft Office.

wat
what suite of products is better at what it does than office? Nothing. Nothing is better.
 
Only if they own OSX.

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Just to make sure, you know that all you need is to have bought a Mac or MacBook any time in the last five years to get the free OS upgrade right?

Even Anti-Apple guys should rejoice that Apple is doing this, it will force Microsoft's hands when providing future OS upgrades. The discounted pricing they had for much of the early months that Windows 8 was out is probably a direct result of the low pricing Apple had for their Mac OS X upgrades. The days of offering a 300 dollar upgrade to a new OS are over and that should be a good thing for all consumers.
 
wat
what suite of products is better at what it does than office? Nothing. Nothing is better.

It is the must have application just like photoshop... everyone "has" it but 98% have no concept of rudimentary knowledge (masks, levels, layers)... If someone wants to auto-enhance photo, I'll suggest something like iPhoto. Same thing applies to MS office.
 
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