Quickoffice Mobile Office Suite for iPhone Rio Rancho NM

If you need to edit Word and Excel files on your iPhone or iPod touch, consider Quickoffice Mobile Office Suite. It's a bit easier to use than alternative apps, runs fast, and is generally stable. It’s taken a while, but the mainstay apps in mobile computing—those intended for mobile business users who need to stay productive—are making their way to the iPhone. Take Quickoffice Mobile Office Suite, a full-blown suite for viewing and editing both Microsoft Word and Excel files.

Local Companies

Officemax
(505) 627-9777
2755 N Main St
Roswell, NM
Contract Associates
(505) 995-0557
2538 Camino Entrada
Santa Fe, NM
Toshiba Business Solutions-Tx-Nm
(505) 624-2952
606 W 2nd St
Roswell, NM
Office Depot
(505) 332-1532
8500 Menaul Blvd NE
Albuquerque, NM
Duke City Typewriter & Systems Inc
(505) 265-8347
5728 Cletsoway Dr SW
Albuquerque, NM
InaBind of New Mexico
505-268-6520
1317 San Pedro NE
Albuquerque, NM
Office Depot
(505) 332-1532
8500 Menaul Blvd NE
Albuquerque, NM
Durr's Office MacHines Service Dept
(505) 983-4121
2096 5th St
Santa Fe, NM
Neeley-James Office Supply Inc
(505) 622-8221
321 N Main St
Roswell, NM
Smith-Corona Typewriter Dealer
(505) 983-4111
2096 5th St
Santa Fe, NM

Posted on by John Brandon , Macworld.com

It’s taken a while, but the mainstay apps in mobile computing—those intended for mobile business users who need to stay productive—are making their way to the iPhone. Take Quickoffice Mobile Office Suite, a full-blown suite for viewing and editing both Microsoft Word and Excel files.


Down to Business: In Quickoffice Mobile Office Suite, you can view and edit Office 2003 docs—with Office 2007 support coming soon—and view other formats, including photos and Powerpoint slides.

Previous offerings from developer Quickoffice included Quicksheet ( ), an app for viewing and editing Excel files, and Quickoffice Files ( ), a file viewer. Quickoffice Mobile bundles these apps into one offering, currently on sale for $13. With some similarities to Documents To Go for iPhone , and some trade-offs, Quickoffice is a good buy.

The main advantage of Quickoffice over Documents To Go is that you can view and edit both Word 2003 and Excel 2003 files. In Documents To Go , you can only edit Word 2007 files—although DataViz promises Excel 2007 editing support soon. The trade-off with Quickoffice is that you can only edit the older Office 2003 format, not the newer Office 2007 format (used in Office 2008 for the Mac). Quickoffice is making its own promises to support the Office 2007 editing imminently.

For Word and Excel files, Quickoffice’s editing features are rich and deep. When you open an Excel file, you can format the cells, adding a background color or cell border, experiment with formulas, and adjust font size and style. You can even edit cells in-line—meaning, when you double-tap you can edit the cell directly, not in a separate field above the spreadsheet.

Word editing is extensive. You can add highlighting, change fonts, and add bullets. Quickoffice uses a more intuitive, Mac-like interface for common functions than Documents To Go. When you want to justify text, you drag and release sample text in a small preview box that shows how your document will look. In Documents To Go, formatting is a bit more menu-driven and not as visual. Documents To Go does offer a word count feature, and a more obvious undo/redo option.

Quickoffice goes well beyond editing. Since the suite integrates Quickoffice Files, you can upload files to a public folder in MobileMe and view them from your iPhone. Or, you can use a Quickoffice e-mail address (files@quickofficeconnect.com) to send attachments. This method is faster because you can send a group of attachments quickly. Quickoffice also provides a way to upload files through your browser using an IP address, although in my tests, that feature proved flaky—the site would stall out or not appear at all. You can upload multiple files at once, but the browser method is prone to time-outs, so it’s usually easier to send e-mail attachments. Quickoffice does not directly support Microsoft Exchange attachments at all.

Quickoffice supports iPhone 3.0’s undo feature—you shake the phone to undo or redo the last edit in a Word or Excel file—and copy/paste features. Not to be outdone by Documents To Go, Quickoffice supports image formats like PNG and BMP, PowerPoint, and text files. The app does not support OpenOffice ODT files, and has problems with very large PowerPoint files over 20MB—in my tests, the app crashed to the home screen on the iPhone for those files. (Quickoffice says this is because the iPhone does not have enough RAM to handle large files.)

At this moment in time, Quickoffice is the best app I’ve found for editing Word and Excel files. It also provides the most flexible options for getting files onto the iPhone, whether by mail attachment, through MobileMe, or as an upload from the Mac Safari browser. It’s stable (except for the PowerPoint large file problems) and runs fast. Overall, Quickoffice is a bit easier to use than the document viewing alternatives—I highly recommend it.

Quickoffice Mobile is compatible with any iPhone or iPod touch running the iPhone 3.0 software update.

[John Brandon is a 20-year veteran Mac user who used to run an all-Mac graphics department.]

Click here to read article at MacWorld

Featured Local Company

InaBind of New Mexico

505-268-6520
1317 San Pedro NE
Albuquerque, NM