- Excel, an app included in Office for Mac 2016.
- Microsoft
“We’re working at a pace of monthly updates,” said Han-yi Shaw, the engineering lead on Office for Mac. “The days of waiting years for new software—those days are over.”
Shaw says that Microsoft will be able to maintain frequent updates because Office for Mac and Office for iPad share a common codebase, so the two will be built out simultaneously. Yet the new Office for Mac suite—already seen in the Office for Mac preview available for public beta testing since March 5—is far more like the Office suite you’d find on a PC, Shaw says.
For instance, like the PC, Office for Mac 2016 has the colored “ribbon” of tabs and menus sitting atop Word, PowerPoint, Excel, Outlook and OneNote (now making its Mac debut). In the past, Shaw noted, Mac users would have tabs and menus for the same functions as their PC counterparts placed in different locations.
Microsoft brought the two suites of apps into parity, in terms of looks and feature set, to make things easier for those who work across Macs, PCs, mobile devices and the Web, he said. “If you’ve used Office on any device. you’ll be able to dive in and use Office and any other device now,” Shaw said. “It wasn’t that way in the past.”
- Powerpoint, an app included in Office for Mac 2016.
- Microsoft
Office for Mac 2016 is available for download now to Office 365 subscribers. Month-to-month access to Office 365 (which offers access to Office apps on PCs, Android, iOS and the Web, too) starts at $6 per month for individuals and $10 per month for families and businesses. Microsoft will offer free and subsidized subscriptions for students and teachers at office.com/student.
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