Touch-Enabled Office Apps Arrive with Windows 10

When Windows 8 launched, Microsoft had built a touch-first version of their operating system, but they had not yet completed their touch-enabled version of their most popular productivity suite. In fact, in the almost three years between Windows 8 and Windows 10, Microsoft released Office on iOS first, and then Android, leaving their own platform as the only one without a touch-enabled version of Office. Finally, with Windows 10, Office Mobile is here.

These are, like practically all pieces of Windows 10, Windows Universal Apps, and therefore they are made to scale all the way from a phone to a large display desktop. Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and OneNote are all available. The experience is very similar to how it looks on the other platforms, and Microsoft has done a nice job keeping the look and feel consistent across the different mobile operating systems.

I think most people are familiar with the Office trio of Word, Excel, and PowerPoint, and perhaps not quite as familiar with OneNote, but the mobile apps are surprisingly competent versions, and can likely easily replace the full Office suite for a lot of people. If you need some of the extra functionality like conditional formatting in Excel, or the ability to open password protected documents, you will need to go with the full version of Office, at least for now.

In pretty typical Microsoft fashion, the apps have been created to allow basic file reading, creation, and editing for free, but if you want to access all of the features you need to purchase an Office 365 subscription. There is a big caveat here though. This only applies to devices under 10.1 inches in screen diameter. Anything larger than this requires a subscription to gain access to edit, which is a pretty big concession. According to Microsoft, they want to keep the free capabilities available for devices that are mostly used with touch, and the Office team feels this cut-off is 10.1 inches. Amazingly, the same company also sells a consumer version of their tablet line, the Surface 3, which is a 10.8 inch device and therefore over the cut-off. They do sell it with a one year subscription, but it’s a rather odd way to market the new Office Mobile apps.

There is also a new piece to the Office puzzle, which is called Sway. Luckily, like OneNote, Sway is free for all users. So what is Sway? It is an interactive storytelling app, and it lets you easily add some text and media, and it will create a sway for you. It’s very much a cloud based app, and you can share links to your sway to view or edit. Think of it like a simpler version of PowerPoint. Here is a sway as an example of what it can do.

OneNote is of course back, and this is Microsoft’s app which lets you do a lot more than just take notes. The touch version is changed from Windows 8, and it now fits in with the theme of the other Office Mobile apps. Fans of the Windows 8 version’s radial menu will be disappointed though since that has gotten the axe.

I think the capabilities of these apps are going to improve over time, but it is unlikely they will ever offer the full functionality of the desktop version of Office. They are targeted towards a different set of needs. It was certainly one of the key missing pieces of the Windows 8 era, so it is great that they have made their debut with Windows 10. Only OneNote is installed out of the box, and the other apps can be found in the store.

DirectX 12 & WDDM 2.0: Reworking the Windows Graphics Stack OneDrive
Comments Locked

293 Comments

View All Comments

  • jeffkibuule - Tuesday, August 25, 2015 - link

    Microsoft can never prove a negative, so there's nothing to say there.

    Tons of consumer protection laws protect against selling you X and then trying to charge Y for the same thing via an update.
  • Oxford Guy - Tuesday, August 25, 2015 - link

    So discontinue "10" early and change the terms for the "10.1" or "11" "upgrade".
  • chrome_slinky - Wednesday, August 26, 2015 - link

    But according to Microshaft, this is Windows Last. All there is and there is no more, other than constant updates breaking things, until the hardware you own is no longer supported. You've EOL'd from Windows.
  • boeush - Tuesday, August 25, 2015 - link

    With respect to the new mandatory auto-update mechanism, I assume the system recovery feature and restore points are still around? If one could always rollback to some previous known-stable system configuration, then all MS would need to do (relative to Win 7 - don't know about Win 8) is automatically keep a large number of restore points spanning at least a couple of months - and add the ability to block a specific update from installing again in the future. Then on the rare occasion that MS screws the pooch by trashing a couple billion PCs worldwide, the process to fix them would be relatively painless for the end-users...
  • Oxford Guy - Tuesday, August 25, 2015 - link

    Who doesn't want huge amounts of I/O going toward that, as well as storage space and processing power?

    Or, they could just stop force-feeding people.
  • boeush - Wednesday, August 26, 2015 - link

    Who said anything about 'huge'? In the same way as version control systems, they only need to store the change 'delta' - and they can compresstge hell put of that data as well (fast or frequent I/O on those files wouldn't be a priority.)
  • boeush - Wednesday, August 26, 2015 - link

    Damn phone keyboards and no edit function on posts...

    "...compress the hell out of..." - was what I *meant* to write.
  • vladx - Tuesday, August 25, 2015 - link

    The OneDrive changes, Windows Update new restrictions will keep on Windows 8.1 until they offer the option to have the old ways back.
  • dragonsqrrl - Tuesday, August 25, 2015 - link

    I've been waiting patiently for this, thank you!
  • takeship - Wednesday, August 26, 2015 - link

    Is there are run down of the new/updated tablet features of windows 10, or did I miss that? Does Win10 make any/noticable changes or improvements for touch users?

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now