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Android Handhelds Microsoft

Microsoft Brings Office To Android Smartphones For Free 85

Mark Wilson writes: After a few weeks in preview, Microsoft Office is now available for Android smartphones. Despite Microsoft's mobile-first, cloud-first philosophy, it has actually taken some time to bring the world's most popular office suite to Android phones — it joins the tablet version of the suite that was released last year. Just like the tablet editions, the phone versions of Word, Excel, and PowerPoint won't cost you a penny, allowing for the viewing and editing of a range of files when on the move. There is a cloud focus with support for not only OneDrive, but also Google Drive, Dropbox, and Box, and Microsoft says it has made changes based on the feedback received during the preview period.
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Microsoft Brings Office To Android Smartphones For Free

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  • 104Mb (Score:5, Informative)

    by ledow ( 319597 ) on Wednesday June 24, 2015 @02:35PM (#49980071) Homepage

    104Mb download just for Word on its own.

    Wow. Seems like all those years of bloated coding are coming back to bite them.

    Install office with very limited use on a mobile, and you lose half a Gig of internal storage on your smartphone and still might have to pay for an Office 365 subscription.

    • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

      by gstoddart ( 321705 )

      Wow. Seems like all those years of bloated coding are coming back to bite them.

      Yeah, no kidding. Both Android and iOS have brought us smaller, leaner apps which take up far less space.

      Microsoft still wants to give us fat x86 binaries.

      Oh well, it's not like I'd be running this anyway.

      Once again, Microsoft is so heavily stuck in the "I'm a PC and he's a Mac" mindset they're incapable of looking past Office and Exchange.

      Good innovating there, Microsoft. The killer mobile app isn't a fucking Power Point slide

      • Re:104Mb (Score:5, Informative)

        by spire3661 ( 1038968 ) on Wednesday June 24, 2015 @02:48PM (#49980189) Journal
        I would like to point out Windows 8.1 can run on a 16 GB partition with 1 GB of ram. Further, MS has historically always pushed hardware.

        What intel giveth, Microsoft taketh away
        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          by nine-times ( 778537 )

          I would like to point out Windows 8.1 can run on a 16 GB partition with 1 GB of ram.

          It can. Theoretically. Just don't install applications or updates, and you might have space enough to run the system and store a few documents.

        • Re:104Mb (Score:5, Informative)

          by JamesTRexx ( 675890 ) on Wednesday June 24, 2015 @04:17PM (#49980819) Journal
          Windows 8.1 can run on a 16 GB partition with 1 GB of ram

          Debian testing, Libreoffice, Eclipse, GIMP, Iceweasel, a whole bunch of other programs and utilities; 10G used on disk (including 2.3G home directory), about 1G RAM actively used of 3, the rest is cache.

          No matter how you look at it, Microsoft has never been in the lean and mean camp. Neither with OS nor Office, database, virtualisation software.
          Maybe open source development fosters a more efficient use of hardware by its nature?
          • by KGIII ( 973947 )

            This is not meant to be derogatory. Maybe OSS got its start with older, second-hand, computers? Personally, except for work, I made use of the various Linux distributions on older hardware, stuff that I had replaced with a new system, before I made the move to convert my regular computer. I also continued to use those systems, the older ones, longer than I would have had I not done so - which means I wrote code on them as well as used them for regular tasks. This may be an additional factor, though I doubt

        • I would like to point out Windows 8.1 can run on a 16 GB partition with 1 GB of ram. Further, MS has historically always pushed hardware.

          What intel giveth, Microsoft taketh away

          The requirements have been the same from Vista- Windows 8.1. Hardware with those specs will run reasonably the same from Vista (SP2) through to Windows 8.1.

          I found it isn't Microsoft that taketh, as much as: Symantec, McAfee, Adobe, Firefox, and Google (Chrome).

          Further on Firefox and Chrome is web developers and websites takething more. On a 9 year old Windows PC that used to function very well, replacing nothing but the web browser, and plugins (like Flash) it is almost unusable on many websites. This isn'

      • Re:104Mb (Score:5, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 24, 2015 @03:11PM (#49980369)

        What do you mean, "smaller"? Apple's Write for iOS is over 200Mb.

      • Once again, Microsoft is so heavily stuck in the "I'm a PC and he's a Mac" mindset they're incapable of looking past Office and Exchange.

        Well, do you know how much money they are making from Office and Exchange?

    • The problem is phone manufacturers are holding everyone back to rape them on memory. We should be lambasting the phone companies for such pathetic offerings. Base memory on the cheapest pocket computer should be 32 GB
      • Flash memory has, historically, been very expensive which is why you don't see larger amounts. There's also the long lead time and certifications for any new product. That's probably two years, minimum, between initial spec and reaching end users.

        Not to mention that you're talking about low-end phones, which are always designed to hit the minimum specs. If you want bigger/faster, then you need to pony up for phones like the iPhone6 or Galaxy S6 which come with 64GB and 128GB options.
    • Maybe Android should allow apps to be installed on the SD card then. I think they used to. Did they bring back that feature yet? Maybe MS Word functionality doesn't mean a lot to you, but for many people, that's a small amount of space to give up if it actually supports viewing and editing files in a way that's compatible with the desktop versions.

      Also, my copy of OpenOffice is 316 MB installed. Why would Microsoft be expected to use less space just because it runs on a phone? If it really is full featur

      • Re:104Mb (Score:5, Interesting)

        by MightyMartian ( 840721 ) on Wednesday June 24, 2015 @03:05PM (#49980307) Journal

        Why would I want to use either on a phone or smaller tablet?

        That's really the point here. Full-pop word processors are not only going to take up huge amounts of limited flash storage and RAM, but they aren't even necessary.

        I use Google's document, spreadsheet and slideshow offerings on my Nexus 5 and Nexus 7. They don't render every aspect of an Office document, though they are getting a lot better (Excel charts display pretty well in Sheets), but I'm really just looking for "good enough", in this case mainly reading, and maybe a very small amount of notation or editing. I'll go to my PC or notebook if I actually want to full blown spreadsheet work or composition. Even with a fully functional version of Word available for my smart devices, I wouldn't pay for the functionality because I'm not a masochist.

        • My phone has an HDMI port on it and it also support bluetooth keyboards. Why should I not be able to hook it up to a fullsize screen and keyboard to do a little bit of work if my phone has the capabilities? Phones are coming out with 3GB or more of RAM on them now, and Octocore processors. Probably won't be too long before we just plug our phones into docking stations and use them as a full computer for basic tasks like web browsing or word processing. I plug my tablet into my TV to play games, and I'm qui

      • Maybe Android should allow apps to be installed on the SD card then. I think they used to. Did they bring back that feature yet?

        Yes. Some apps refuse to be moved, however, even user apps. Some of them will work if you move them forcibly, with Ti Backup. Others need to be moved with more care, to an ext formatted partition on your sd card which — I am sure someone will correct me if I am wrong — I believe is now supported only on third-party roms.

        With that said, I have access to all three methods on my titan running SOKP, and I can't imagine why anyone would run a stock ROM for long anyway.

    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      104Mb download just for Word on its own.

      Thats not unusual these days. Almost all Android applications are getting pretty bloated. On my Android 5.1.1 phone, Chrome is 101 Mb, Facebook is 200 Mb, Google Docs, Sheets and Slides are 70 Mb a piece and even a simple forum viewer for Whirlpool is 10 Mb.

      Long gone are the days of applications being under 1 Mb. Seems like more than just 3 years ago though.

      Install office with very limited use on a mobile, and you lose half a Gig of internal storage on your smartphone and still might have to pay for an Office 365 subscription.

      That being true, this move is a clear sign that Microsoft is fearing the other office compatible products on Android, especially since Google have be

    • So you mean 13MB? That's still pretty big.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    While you can download the apps for free, you get a lite version of the apps. To get full functionality, you have to have a paying subscription to Office 365.

  • Considering how poorly files move between different versions of Office for the same platform (and some times even between the same version for the same platform!) I look forward to now being able to trash my files on the go. Thank you Microsoft, I have been wishing for some time that you would find a way to make my files even more fragile yet.
    • Re: (Score:1, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Considering how poorly files move between different versions of Office for the same platform (and some times even between the same version for the same platform!)

      I've seen this troll many times but never once in practice. Can you give me a concrete example that is easily reproducible or would affect a majority of users?

      • Considering how poorly files move between different versions of Office for the same platform (and some times even between the same version for the same platform!)

        Can you give me a concrete example that is easily reproducible or would affect a majority of users?

        I have personally lost files many times in office when I took a file from one PC to another, even when they are running the same version. Powerpoint is the worst offender, but I have lost Word documents as well. Recently my boss sent me a Powerpoint presentation that he made in Powerpoint for Mac and I had to deliver it in the latest version of Powerpoint for windows at a departmental seminar; I ended up with the distinction of being the first person to crash Powerpoint that day.

        That distinction might

  • Our company switched to Office 2013 and forced us all to upgrade. I tried creating a powerpoint. Simple bullet point list. The cursor moves fluidly with some kind of animation etc. But selection, cut/past etc seem to have a lag that can not be explained. I am running it on a souped up high performance finite element solver machine, 16 cores, 64GB RAM, high powered graphics card etc. It seems to be pushing this one drive and cloud storage a lot, makes you jump through the hoops to save anything to a new loca
  • Google Docs... (Score:4, Informative)

    by DarthVain ( 724186 ) on Wednesday June 24, 2015 @03:22PM (#49980425)

    Or you could just use Google Docs in your browser. Unsurprisingly also supports Google Drive.

    So MS makes a pointless app, and makes it free!

  • by walterbyrd ( 182728 ) on Wednesday June 24, 2015 @03:28PM (#49980481)

    I do not develop big complicated documents on my phone.

    For my phone, a standard text editor is more than enough.

    If somebody emails a .docx file, I'll wait until I am on a computer with LibreOffice.

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      I do not develop big complicated documents on my phone.

      Oh, they will be complicated after you make them in MS-Office.

    • It's not bad to have a viewer app that'll render Word/Excel/Powerpoint properly though...

  • Ah, the sweet nostalgia of BSOD on my smartphone.

  • Now, Microsoft have a Cloud interface that works on all platform (Win, IOS, OSX, Linux), Google don't.
    Now, Microsoft have a Office suite that works on all platform (WIn, Ios, Osx, Linux) Google don't.

    It's amazing how a year change in the software market. Yesterday google was the leader, now they aren't there.

    • by MightyMartian ( 840721 ) on Wednesday June 24, 2015 @05:04PM (#49981115) Journal

      That's odd. I can use Google Drive, create documents and spreadsheets on all the above platforms, download them in multiple formats and edit them on other platforms.

      Why would I pay Microsoft money for that which I can already do?

    • Windows 10 may very well kill Android on the tablet. I have a very nice Android tablet but I seldom turn it on at all since I got this Asus Transformer with x86 Windows 8,1 on it. Everything is crippled on a toy OS.

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by CastrTroy ( 595695 )

        I'm surprised Windows 8 hasn't already killed Android on tablets. Guess it takes people a while to realize how bad Android is. I have a Surface 2 RT, and the OS itself is so much better than Android. It's a shame developers didn't latch on to the Windows app store more. It's truly a joy to use this device. Android really is quite crippled. No native support for multiple apps. No native support for Google Drive (developer has to write their own code to support it). No native support for network shares. Does

        • by Anonymous Coward

          I agree with you, but you only have to check out all the comments on here on why Windows on a tablet isn't more popular. Microsoft gives away free Office and all they get here is hate. These are the nerds non-technical people turn to when they're looking to buy tech. And almost all of them on here hate Microsoft because of something that happened from 20 years ago or because it's not Linux. Microsoft could open source everything tomorrow and these haters would still go on with their tired "it's a trap!" bul

  • by Nexzus ( 673421 )

    I was creating Word and Excel documents, for free as they were included in the OS, more than a decade ago on my trusty iPaq 6315.

    Why is this news?

  • It's bad enough that MS is harassing every phone/tablet manufacturer to pay some sort of "Android tax", because of "reasons". I'd like to see a single manufacturer stand up to this kind of crap, but so far that's not happening. I don't want MS anywhere near my phone.
  • Free? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by null etc. ( 524767 )

    With all the money that Microsoft charges for patents used by Android, I'd hardly call it free.

  • It's a trap! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by walterbyrd ( 182728 ) on Wednesday June 24, 2015 @08:30PM (#49982385)

    Microsoft is just trying to get everybody locked in to their proprietary format.

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