Just
as I was warming up to choosing a Microsoft Office 365 subscription
over making a one-time software purchase, Microsoft started giving away a
lot of subscription benefits for free. The company now offers Word,
Excel and others at no cost on most mobile devices.
It’s a smart move by Microsoft, but it makes me wonder whether you really need a subscription, which starts at $70 a year.
The
subscription will appeal to people who use Office apps on traditional
Windows or Mac computers or Windows tablets, such as the Surface Pro 3.
Those who primarily use iOS and Android mobile devices can probably
stick with free apps. What’s right for you comes down to whether you
need a PC or can get things done with just your smartphone or tablet.
Here’s what to consider.
THE FREEBIES
Microsoft’s
newly released Office apps for iPhones, iPads and Android tablets are
quite good. Microsoft offers Word for text documents, Excel for
spreadsheets, PowerPoint for presentations, Outlook for email and
OneNote for organization — all for free. (Access for databases and
Publisher for desktop publishing aren’t available yet.)
I’m
writing this review on Word using an iPad and Android tablets from
Samsung and Google — the latter with a wireless keyboard. I’ve edited
documents on an iPhone and am pleased it has the same features that are
available on the iPad, though with some menu changes to account for the
smaller screen.
I’m
still not totally used to the mobile apps, especially for cutting and
pasting text in Word and inserting cells in Excel spreadsheets. There
are also missing features, such as green underlines of potential
grammatical mistakes. But the apps include most of what I use on PCs.
You do have to sign in with a Microsoft account, but you can create one
for free.
On
Apple devices, a subscription would unlock about two dozen features,
such as inserting section breaks and tracking changes between drafts.
(Some power users might need these, but I don’t.) There are fewer
features available for Android phones and tablets, whether free or for
pay. Microsoft says the Android apps will catch up, as well as the
version for Windows phones.
Note: If you have a Windows tablet, you must pay for Office unless you’re running a lightweight operating system called RT.
PAY ONCE, NEVER AGAIN
Can’t
live with just a smartphone or tablet? You can buy Office for personal
computers and Windows tablets the traditional way, by paying for the
software just once. For $140, you get Word, Excel, PowerPoint and
OneNote. Comparatively, an Office 365 subscription costs $70 a year for
one user, so by year three the subscription is costing you more. You’re
guaranteed the latest version of Office, which comes out every three
years, but the one-time fee is still cheaper.
SO WHY PAY AGAIN AND AGAIN?
— For iOS and Android mobile devices, you get extra features you can’t get any other way.
—
Most Windows tablets, including the Surface Pro, require a one-time
purchase or subscription, even for basic features. The subscription also
gives you three apps you don’t get with the $140 one-time purchase:
Outlook, Access and Publisher. (You can buy all seven Office apps for a
one-time fee of $400, but the subscription is cheaper.)
—
For PCs, a $70 one-user annual subscription lets you use all seven
Office apps on multiple PCs and tablets by signing in and out. The $140
one-time purchase limits you to one device and four of the seven apps.
—
The subscription is a great deal for multiple users or multiple PCs.
For $100 a year, rather than $70, you can install the software suite on
up to five Mac or Windows PCs, so you don’t have to keep signing in and
out. That can be five PCs you have, or five individuals in a household.
You can switch up the PCs as often as you like. (A subscription also
allots you an additional five tablets and five phones, but Microsoft
doesn’t really enforce that limit.)
—
If you have a lot of files to store, a subscription gives you 1
terabyte of online storage through OneDrive, compared with just the 15
gigabytes you get with a free account. You also get 60 minutes a month
of Skype calls to anyone. Typically, free Skype calls are limited to
other Skype users.
THE VALUE
The
days of keeping your digital life on a single machine are long gone,
and the subscription makes it easy to manage multiple PCs. But people
tend to have multiple mobile devices, not PCs. Microsoft’s giveaway of
iOS and Android apps eliminates a major need for a subscription.
Then
again, Microsoft has little choice when it’s competing with cheap and
free apps that recognize the Office file format. The company would
rather people stick with Office, even for free, in hopes they will buy
premium features later. There are signs that’s working: Excluding
business customers, Office subscribers grew 30 percent to 9.2 million in
the last three months of 2014 — the same period Microsoft released its
latest iPhone and iPad apps and made core features free.
Posted by : Gizmeon
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