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This article was published on March 27, 2014

Office for iPhone and Android phones is now completely free, Android tablet version coming ‘in the future’


Office for iPhone and Android phones is now completely free, Android tablet version coming ‘in the future’

In addition to releasing Office for iPad, Microsoft today also updated Office Mobile for iPhone and Office Mobile for Android with a major change: both are now completely free for home use. You can download the new versions now directly from Apple’s App Store and Google Play.

Microsoft says the decision was made in order to align Office Mobile for Windows Phone with its iOS and Android counterparts. As a result, Office Mobile now lets smartphone users view, as well as edit, content on the go for free. An Office 365 subscription is no longer required for editing.

No new features were released today. The changelogs for both iOS and Android apps are the same:

  • Office Mobile is now free for home use.
  • Bug fixes and stability improvements.

The “home use” terminology suggests that Microsoft still plans to require that businesses have an Office 365 subscription. It will be tough for the company to enforce that rule, however, given that employees can install this update on their personal devices, which they can then bring to work.

Microsoft is likely making this change in response to both Apple’s and Google’s free mobile office suites. Apple offers iWork for free (iOS 7 and up) on its new devices and Google offers QuickOffice for free on its new devices (Android 4.4 and up).

Yet Microsoft’s strategy is different in that it treats tablets as premium devices, meaning their owners have to pay to edit documents, spreadsheets, and presentations. That’s restricted to iOS for now, but it’s easy to see that the company may release an Office Mobile for Android tablets one day as well.

Update: Yep, Microsoft is working on bringing Office to Android tablets, as well as a Metro version for touch-enabled Windows devices. We knew about the latter, but the latter is news. “In the future we will bring Office apps to the Windows Store and other popular platforms, including Android tablets,” a Microsoft spokesperson told TNW.

See also – KitKat ships with Google’s Quickoffice, bringing Microsoft Office editing out of the box to all new Android users and Apple releasing new iWork for iOS and Mac with iCloud collaboration today, free for new devices

Top Image Credit: Robert Scoble

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